Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

47
Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons Jaime A. Pineda, Ph.D. Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory COGS1 class

Transcript of Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Page 1: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Social Cognition:Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Jaime A. Pineda, Ph.D.Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory

COGS1 class

Page 2: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Research Interest

! Understanding the behavior of others

The capacity to achieve internal descriptions of actions

and use them to organize one’s own future behaviors

! Neural mechanisms for understanding actions and their intentions

! The effects on learning and social interactions

Page 3: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Motivating Questions

! How do we understand the actions of others?! Rationally? ! Intuitively?

! How do we understand first- and third-person experiences?! Perspective-taking?

Page 4: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Questions

! What are mirror neurons?! Can they help us understand actions

and their intentions?! Are they important for social

interactions?! How do we study mirror neurons

noninvasively?! What happens when mirroring systems

become dysfunctional?

Page 5: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Classic Explanation

! Theory-Theory(argument from analogy; disembodied knowledge; visual hypothesis)

! Involves striate, extrastriate, inferotemporallobe and superior temporal sulcus, among others

Page 6: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

A New Perspective

! Simulation Theory(Direct-matching hypothesis; embodied knowledge)! Map visual information onto

motor representations of the same action

! Mirroring systems! bridges between perception and

action that allow for simulation ! Mirror neurons! Mu rhythms

Page 7: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Mirror Neurons and Mu Rhythms

Inferior frontal gyrus

Superior temporalsulcus

Inferior parietallobule

Sensorimotorcortex normal

suppressed

Iacoboni and Dapretto, Nature Reviews, 2006,7:942-951 Visual input

Page 8: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

An Observation/Execution Matching System?

! A dysfunctional “mirror system” produces problems in understanding actions

Inferior frontal gyrus

Superior temporalsulcus

Sensorimotorcortex

Inferior parietallobule

Visual input

Page 9: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Biological Motion

! Visual system's ability to recover object information from sparse input

! Gender! Activity engaged in! Emotional state

Page 10: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Biological Motion Perception: Monkeys

! Perret and colleagues(1989; 1990; 1994)

Cells in superior temporal polysensoryarea (STPa) of the macaque temporal cortex appear sensitive to biological motion

Oram & Perrett, J. Cog. Neurosci., 1994, 6(2), 99-116

Page 11: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Biological Motion Perception: Humans

! An area in the superior temporal sulcus (STS) in humans responds to biological motion

! Other areas do as well, including frontal cortex, SMA, insula, thalamus, amygdala

Grossman et al. J. Cog. Neurosci., 2000, 12(5), 711-720

Page 12: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Brain Circuit for Social Perception (SP)

Allison et al., Trends in Cog. Sci., 2000, 4, 267-272

• SP is processing of information that results in the accurate analysis of the intentions of others

• STS involved in the processing of a variety of social signals

Page 13: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Mirror Neurons

! Found in:! area F5 of monkey (homolog of Broca’s

area)! STSa! inferior parietal cortex (7b)

! Activated by:! Goal directed actions (reaching,

grasping, holding)! Observation of similar actions

performed by “biological” agents

! Do not respond to target alone or intransitive gestures (i.e., nonobjectdirected)

! Do not respond to mechanical movements

Di Pellegrino et al., Exp. Brain Res., 1992, 91, 176-80

Page 14: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Rizzolatti et al., Cogn. Brain Res., 1996, 3:131-141

Mirror Neuron Activity

Page 15: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Perception-to-Action Mapping

Action

Logically-RelatedCongruent

Perception

Page 16: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Understanding Intentions

Umilta et al. Neuron, 2001, 32: 91-101

Iacoboni et al., PLoS Biol., 2005, 3(3): e79

Grasping Mimicking

Page 17: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

! Response facilitation! Mimicry! Simulation! Imitation learning ! Understanding actions ! Understanding

intentions! Empathy! Theory of Mind! Language

Functional Significance

Page 18: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

MNS Activity No MNS Activity

intentionality?anthropomorphism?

biological realism?motivational significance?

transitive/intransitive actions?

generalizability?

Characterizing the System

learning?

social relevance?

Page 19: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Mu Suppression No Mu Suppression

intentionality?anthropomorphism?

biological realism?motivational significance?

transitive/intransitive actions?

generalizability?

Characterizing the System

learning?

social relevance?

Page 20: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Rolandic “en arceau” rhythm(7-11 Hz)

“…blocked when the subject performs a movement or simply when he changes his postural tone.”

“…disappears when the subject identifies himself with an active person represented on the screen.”

Page 21: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Mu Rhythm Characteristics

! Analog of the feline SMR (12-16 Hz)

! Maximal over sensorimotor areas

! Attenuated or blocked by movement

! Not affected by opening/closing the eyes

! Not affected by auditory/visual stimulation in the absence of movement

Kuhlman, W.N., Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophys., 1978, 44: 83-93

Page 22: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Frequency Analysis of Mu Rhythm

Power

Frequency

(8-13 Hz)

(10-14 Hz)

Page 23: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Pineda et al., IEEE Trans. Rehab. Engr., 2000, 8(2): 219-222

Does Mu Suppression Reflect Mirror Activity?

Baseline

Move

Observe

Imagine

Page 24: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Action Observation and Social Interaction

! To what degree do mu rhythms, like mirror neurons, reflect social interaction?

Oberman et al., Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 2007, 2, 62-66

Page 25: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

! Measured mu power (2 min of EEG) in normals (n=20) ages 18-34 (mean=21.1, SD=3.40 ) under different observation conditions:

! Non-interacting! Social Action - Spectator ! Social Action - Interactive! Visual white noise

! Engaged in continuous performance task during observation

Experimental Paradigm

Page 26: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Non-interacting Social Action - Spectator

Social Action - Interactive

Page 27: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

4

Non-Interacting Social Action,Spectator

Social Action,Interactive

Deg

ree

of S

ocia

l Int

erac

tion

Results

Page 28: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Results

-0.4

-0.3

-0.2

-0.1

0

0.1

Social Action, InteractiveSocial Action, SpectatorNon-Interacting

C3 CZ C4

Page 29: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

! Are mu rhythms sensitive to processing of facial expressions?

Thurman and Pineda, in prep

Understanding Facial Expressions

Page 30: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Understanding Facial Expressions

Emotion versus gender discrimination task

Disgust Anger Happy

Page 31: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Results

Page 32: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Results (cont.)

r = -0.5 r = -0.04

r = 0.73

Page 33: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Autism: A Dysfunctional Mirror System?

! Autistic spectrum disorders are characterized by:! Impairments in social interaction! Delayed/abnormal language

development! Impaired imagination! Impaired imitation! Repetitive and restricted patterns of

behavior

! No common underlying mechanism has been identified! Deficits in imitation learning –

Rogers and Pennington, 1991

Page 34: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Hypothesis

! If mu rhythms reflect MNS activity and the capacity to understand actions as well as learn through imitation, then autistics should show differences in mu rhythms compared to controls

Oberman et al., Cog. Brain Res. 2005, 24: 190-198

Page 35: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Experimental Paradigm

! Measured mu power (2 min of EEG) in normals (n=12) and autistics (n=10) under different conditions:

! Self-movement of hand

! Watching video of someone moving their hand

! Watching a video of a ball moving up and down

Oberman et al., Brain Res Cogn Brain Res. 2005, 24(2):190-8.

Page 36: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Results

Page 37: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Creating a Temporary “Autistic” Brain

! Do sensorimotor mu rhythms reflect downstream modulation from cells in premotor cortex?

Pineda et al., in prep

RATIONALEIf mirror neurons in IFG are involved in the direct modulation of mu rhythms, then temporary inhibition of these neurons should prevent suppression of mu rhythms and cause “autistic-like” behaviors.

Page 38: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Method

! Measured EEG mu power in typically developing adults (n=8) under different conditions before and after IFG stimulation

! Observation of movement (4 videos)! Simple (hand movements) and complex (social

interactions)

! Baron-Cohen’s Eyes Task! Emotion and gender discrimination

! 1 Hz rTMS (5 min at ~ 40-50% MEP threshold) targeted at left IFG

Page 39: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Results

ACCURACY

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

ET-EMOTION ET-GENDERCONDITIONS

PER

CEN

T C

OR

REC

T

PRE

POST

Page 40: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Results

IFG STIMULATION

-0.1

-0.08

-0.06

-0.04

-0.02

0

0.02

0.04

0.06

0.08

0.1

C3 C4 C3 C4

SIMPLE COMPLEXMOVEMENT TYPE

MU

SU

PPR

ESSI

ON

PRE

POST

Page 41: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Reversing Autism?

! Operant conditioning of the mu rhythm (10 weeks)! HF ASD: 7-17 yr olds; n=20

! Rationale! Changes in mu rhythm dynamics

produces changes in MNS activity and in behaviors mediated by this system

! Experimental/Control groups ! Mu activity above threshold (E)! EMG activity below threshold

(E/C) Pineda et al., in prep

Page 42: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Assessments

! Verification of diagnosis (IQ, ADI, ADOS)

! Quantitative EEG (QEEG)! Test of Variable Attention (TOVA)! Imitation ability (De Renzi’s

Apraxia imitation test)! Mu suppression index (MSI)! Autism Treatment Evaluation

Checklist (ATEC - parental assessment)

! Neuroimaging (fMRI, DTI, fcMRI)

Page 43: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Sustained Attention

! Reduction trend in ADHD score for experimental group

ADHD SCORES FROM TOVA

-5.00

-4.60

-4.20

-3.80

-3.40

-3.00

Experimentals Controls

Z-SC

OR

ES PrePost

Page 44: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Mu Suppression Index

MU SUPPRESSION INDEX

-0.1

-0.08

-0.06

-0.04

-0.02

0

0.02

0.04

0.06

HAND SOCIAL HAND SOCIAL

PRE-TRAINING POST-TRAINING

LOG

[CO

ND

ITIO

N/B

ASE

LIN

E]

CONTROLS

EXPERIMENTALS

Page 45: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

A Fundamental Organizational Feature of the Brain?

“Understanding others as intentional agents may be groundedin the relational nature of our interactions with the world”

! Beyond understanding actions! emotions: the root of empathy?! sounds and other senses ! language

! Other problems in “mirroring”! Aberrant imitation learning: addiction?

Page 46: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

What Is It Like To Be…?

Thomas Nagel, The Philosophical Review 83 (1974).

Can aspects of subjective experience be reduced to brain activity?

Page 47: Social Cognition: Mu Rhythms and Mirror Neurons

Collaborators and Students

! Vilayanur Ramachandran! Lindsay Oberman! Eric Altschuler! Andrey Vankov! Bill Skinner! Chulie Ulloa! Brendan Allison! Ed Hubbard! Joe McCleery! Erin Hecht! David Brang

([email protected])! Scott Carey

! Adrienne Moore! Rajiv Rao! Chris Robinson! Hanie Elfenbein! Alex Bressler! Steven Thurman! Jena Davis! John Hestenes! Dong Suk! Christa Futagaki! Judith Kaye! Lee Edwards