Believing androids - fMRI activation in the right temporo-parietal junction is modulated by ascribing intentions to non-human agents.

Journal: Social neuroscience
PMID:

Abstract

Attributing mind to interaction partners has been shown to increase the social relevance we ascribe to others' actions and to modulate the amount of attention dedicated to them. However, it remains unclear how the relationship between higher-order mind attribution and lower-level attention processes is established in the brain. In this neuroimaging study, participants saw images of an anthropomorphic robot that moved its eyes left- or rightwards to signal the appearance of an upcoming stimulus in the same (valid cue) or opposite location (invalid cue). Independently, participants' beliefs about the intentionality underlying the observed eye movements were manipulated by describing the eye movements as under human control or preprogrammed. As expected, we observed a validity effect behaviorally and neurologically (increased response times and activation in the invalid vs. valid condition). More importantly, we observed that this effect was more pronounced for the condition in which the robot's behavior was believed to be controlled by a human, as opposed to be preprogrammed. This interaction effect between cue validity and belief was, however, only found at the neural level and was manifested as a significant increase of activation in bilateral anterior temporoparietal junction.

Authors

  • Ceylan Özdem
    a Department of Psychology , Vrije Universiteit Brussels , Brussels , Belgium.
  • Eva Wiese
    Department of Psychology, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, United States of America.
  • Agnieszka Wykowska
    Engineering Psychology, Division of Human Work Sciences, Luleå University of Technology, Luleå 97187, Sweden Technische Universität München, Institute for Cognitive Systems, Arcisstraße 21, 80333 München, Germany agnieszka.wykowska@tum.de.
  • Hermann Müller
    c Department of Psychology , Ludwig Maximilians-Universiteit , Munchen , Germany.
  • Marcel Brass
    f Ghent Institute for Functional and Metabolic Imaging , University of Ghent , Ghent , Belgium.
  • Frank Van Overwalle
    a Department of Psychology , Vrije Universiteit Brussels , Brussels , Belgium.