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      People thinking about thinking people. The role of the temporo-parietal junction in "theory of mind".

      Neuroimage
      Awareness, physiology, Brain Mapping, Dominance, Cerebral, Facial Expression, Humans, Image Enhancement, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Interpersonal Relations, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Nerve Net, Oxygen, blood, Parietal Lobe, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Problem Solving, Social Perception, Speech Perception, Temporal Lobe, Thinking, Visual Cortex

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          Abstract

          Humans powerfully and flexibly interpret the behaviour of other people based on an understanding of their minds: that is, we use a "theory of mind." In this study we distinguish theory of mind, which represents another person's mental states, from a representation of the simple presence of another person per se. The studies reported here establish for the first time that a region in the human temporo-parietal junction (here called the TPJ-M) is involved specifically in reasoning about the contents of another person's mind. First, the TPJ-M was doubly dissociated from the nearby extrastriate body area (EBA; Downing et al., 2001). Second, the TPJ-M does not respond to false representations in non-social control stories. Third, the BOLD response in the TPJ-M bilaterally was higher when subjects read stories about a character's mental states, compared with stories that described people in physical detail, which did not differ from stories about nonhuman objects. Thus, the role of the TPJ-M in understanding other people appears to be specific to reasoning about the content of mental states.

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