Publication | Open Access
Neural coding of assessing another person’s knowledge based on nonverbal cues
22
Citations
28
References
2014
Year
Successful CommunicationNeurolinguisticsAffective NeurosciencePsycholinguisticsCognitionBrain OrganizationPsychologySocial SciencesSocial NeuroscienceLanguage StudiesCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceCurrent Knowledge StateNeural CodingCommunication NeuroscienceLanguage NetworkHuman CognitionNonverbal CuesSocial CognitionSpeech CommunicationInterpersonal CommunicationSocial InferencesHuman InteractionNeuroscienceAffect PerceptionEmotion RecognitionNonverbal Communication
For successful communication, conversational partners need to estimate each other's current knowledge state. Nonverbal facial and bodily cues can reveal relevant information about how confident a speaker is about what they are saying. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we aimed to identify brain regions that encode how confident a speaker is perceived to be. Participants viewed videos of people answering general knowledge questions and judged each respondent's confidence in their answer. Our results suggest a distinct role of two neural networks known to support social inferences, the so-called mentalizing and the mirroring network. While activation in both networks underlies the processing of nonverbal cues, only activity in the mentalizing network, most notably the medial prefrontal cortex and the bilateral temporoparietal junction, is modulated by how confident the respondent is judged to be. Our results support an integrative account of the mirroring and mentalizing network, in which the two systems support each other in aiding pragmatic processing.
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