The Role of the Ventrolateral Anterior Temporal Lobes in Social Cognition

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Standard Standard

The Role of the Ventrolateral Anterior Temporal Lobes in Social Cognition. / Balgova, Eva; Diveica, Veronica; Walbrin, Jon et al.
In: Human Brain Mapping, Vol. 43, No. 15, 15.10.2022, p. 4589-4608.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Balgova, E, Diveica, V, Walbrin, J & Binney, RJ 2022, 'The Role of the Ventrolateral Anterior Temporal Lobes in Social Cognition', Human Brain Mapping, vol. 43, no. 15, pp. 4589-4608. https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.25976

APA

Balgova, E., Diveica, V., Walbrin, J., & Binney, R. J. (2022). The Role of the Ventrolateral Anterior Temporal Lobes in Social Cognition. Human Brain Mapping, 43(15), 4589-4608. https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.25976

CBE

Balgova E, Diveica V, Walbrin J, Binney RJ. 2022. The Role of the Ventrolateral Anterior Temporal Lobes in Social Cognition. Human Brain Mapping. 43(15):4589-4608. https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.25976

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Balgova E, Diveica V, Walbrin J, Binney RJ. The Role of the Ventrolateral Anterior Temporal Lobes in Social Cognition. Human Brain Mapping. 2022 Oct 15;43(15):4589-4608. Epub 2022 Jun 18. doi: https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.25976

Author

Balgova, Eva ; Diveica, Veronica ; Walbrin, Jon et al. / The Role of the Ventrolateral Anterior Temporal Lobes in Social Cognition. In: Human Brain Mapping. 2022 ; Vol. 43, No. 15. pp. 4589-4608.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Role of the Ventrolateral Anterior Temporal Lobes in Social Cognition

AU - Balgova, Eva

AU - Diveica, Veronica

AU - Walbrin, Jon

AU - Binney, Richard J

N1 - No embargo upon publication © 2022 The Authors. Human Brain Mapping published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.

PY - 2022/10/15

Y1 - 2022/10/15

N2 - A key challenge for neurobiological models of social cognition is to elucidate whether brain regions are specialised for that domain. In recent years, discussion surrounding the role of anterior temporal regions epitomises such debates; some argue the anterior temporal lobe (ATL) is part of a domain-specific network for social processing, while others claim it comprises a domain-general hub for semantic representation. In the present study, we used ATL-optimised fMRI to map the contribution of different ATL structures to a variety of paradigms frequently used to probe a crucial social ability, namely ‘theory of mind’ (ToM). Using multiple tasks enables a clearer attribution of activation to ToM as opposed to idiosyncratic features of stimuli. Further, we directly explored whether these same structures are also activated by a non-social task probing semantic representations. We revealed that common to all of the tasks was activation of a key ventrolateral ATL region that is often invisible to standard fMRI. This constitutes novel evidence in support of the view that the ventrolateral ATL contributes to social cognition via a domain-general role in semantic processing, and against claims of a specialised social function.

AB - A key challenge for neurobiological models of social cognition is to elucidate whether brain regions are specialised for that domain. In recent years, discussion surrounding the role of anterior temporal regions epitomises such debates; some argue the anterior temporal lobe (ATL) is part of a domain-specific network for social processing, while others claim it comprises a domain-general hub for semantic representation. In the present study, we used ATL-optimised fMRI to map the contribution of different ATL structures to a variety of paradigms frequently used to probe a crucial social ability, namely ‘theory of mind’ (ToM). Using multiple tasks enables a clearer attribution of activation to ToM as opposed to idiosyncratic features of stimuli. Further, we directly explored whether these same structures are also activated by a non-social task probing semantic representations. We revealed that common to all of the tasks was activation of a key ventrolateral ATL region that is often invisible to standard fMRI. This constitutes novel evidence in support of the view that the ventrolateral ATL contributes to social cognition via a domain-general role in semantic processing, and against claims of a specialised social function.

KW - semantic memory

KW - social cognition

KW - theory of mind

KW - anterior temporal lobe

KW - distortion-corrected fMRI

U2 - https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.25976

DO - https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.25976

M3 - Article

C2 - 35716023

VL - 43

SP - 4589

EP - 4608

JO - Human Brain Mapping

JF - Human Brain Mapping

SN - 1097-0193

IS - 15

ER -