TMS-induced inhibition of the left premotor cortex modulates illusory social perception

Communicative actions from one person are used to predict another person’s response. However, in some cases, these predictions can outweigh the processing of sensory information and lead to illusory social perception such as seeing two people interact, although only one is present (i.e., seeing a Ba...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:iScience 2023-08, Vol.26 (8), p.107297-107297, Article 107297
Hauptverfasser: Peylo, Charline, Sterner, Elisabeth F., Zeng, Yifan, Bingger, Annika, Engelhardt, Gabriel, Gnam, Viola, Gottmann, Marie, Leininger, Christof, Lukasova, Zdislava, Mersmann, Keno, Özbey, Ada, Pirn, Liisbeth, Riecke, Jacob, Schellnast, Sarah, Schowe, Gina Marie, Weidenhöfer, Dominik, Wunderatzke, Jasmin, Wunner, Nele, Friedrich, Elisabeth V.C.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Communicative actions from one person are used to predict another person’s response. However, in some cases, these predictions can outweigh the processing of sensory information and lead to illusory social perception such as seeing two people interact, although only one is present (i.e., seeing a Bayesian ghost). We applied either inhibitory brain stimulation over the left premotor cortex (i.e., real TMS) or sham TMS. Then, participants indicated the presence or absence of a masked agent that followed a communicative or individual gesture of another agent. As expected, participants had more false alarms in the communicative (i.e., Bayesian ghosts) than individual condition in the sham TMS session and this difference between conditions vanished after real TMS. In contrast to our hypothesis, the number of false alarms increased (rather than decreased) after real TMS. These pre-registered findings confirm the significance of the premotor cortex for social action predictions and illusory social perception. [Display omitted] •Social predictions can outweigh sensory information and lead to illusory perception•Premotor cortex is linked to the illusory social perception of a Bayesian ghost•TMS over premotor cortex modulates how social predictions influence our perception Neuroscience; Behavioral neuroscience; Cognitive neuroscience
ISSN:2589-0042
2589-0042
DOI:10.1016/j.isci.2023.107297