Abstract

Several studies investigated the neural and functional mechanisms underlying action observation in contexts with objects. However, actions seen in everyday life are often embedded in emotional contexts. The neural systems integrating emotion cues in action observation are still poorly understood. Previous findings suggest that the processing of both action and emotion information recruits motor control areas within the cerebello-thalamo-cortical pathways. It is therefore hard to determine whether social emotional contexts influence action processing via a direct modulation of motor representations coding for the observed action or via the affective state and implicit motor preparedness elicited in observers in response to emotional contexts. Here we designed a novel fMRI task to identify neural networks engaged by the affective appraisal of a grasping action seen in two different emotional contexts, while keeping the action kinematics constant. Results confirmed that observing the same acts of grasping but in different emotional contexts modulated activity in supplementary motor area, ventrolateral thalamus, anterior cerebellum. Moreover, changes in functional connectivity between left supplementary motor area and parahippocampus in different emotional contexts suggested a direct neural pathway through which emotional contexts may drive the neural motor system. Taken together, these findings shed new light on the malleability of motor system as a function of emotional contexts.

Highlights

  • A key challenge of social and affective neuroscience is to understand how neural systems control behaviors in social and emotional situations [1,2,3]

  • Many studies in the field of social behavior have focused on action observation as the recognition of grasping hand actions performed in context containing objects [4,5,6,7]

  • The main effect of face observation revealed significant activations restricted to visual areas, including the right middle temporal gyrus/BA22, and left medial lingual gyrus/BA18 (P

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Summary

Introduction

A key challenge of social and affective neuroscience is to understand how neural systems control behaviors in social and emotional situations [1,2,3]. As pointed out by these authors, this greater responsiveness of motor network suggests that emotional reactions often include some form of action preparedness, engaging areas directly involved in movement control such as the cerebello-thalamo-cortical pathways [16,17,18,19,20]. Given these results, it is reasonable to hypothesize that emotional contexts can modulate neural activity in those areas directly involved in movement control. Our main hypothesis was that the activity of motor circuits within the cerebellar-thalamocortical pathway would be differentially driven by the emotional contexts associated with observed actions

Methods
Neuroimaging Results
Discussion
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