No evidence of theory of mind reasoning in the human language network

Author:

Shain Cory1,Paunov Alexander2,Chen Xuanyi3,Lipkin Benjamin1,Fedorenko Evelina14

Affiliation:

1. McGovern Institute for Brain Research, MIT Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences,   Bldg 46-316077 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139 , United States

2. NeuroSpin Center INSERM-CEA Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit (UNICOG), , Gif sur Yvette 91191 , France

3. Rice University Department of Cognitive Sciences, , 6100 Main Street, Houston, TX 77005 , United States

4. Program in Speech Hearing in Bioscience and Technology, Harvard Medical School , 260 Longwood Avenue, TMEC 333, Boston, MA 02115 , United States

Abstract

AbstractLanguage comprehension and the ability to infer others’ thoughts (theory of mind [ToM]) are interrelated during development and language use. However, neural evidence that bears on the relationship between language and ToM mechanisms is mixed. Although robust dissociations have been reported in brain disorders, brain activations for contrasts that target language and ToM bear similarities, and some have reported overlap. We take another look at the language-ToM relationship by evaluating the response of the language network, as measured with fMRI, to verbal and nonverbal ToM across 151 participants. Individual-participant analyses reveal that all core language regions respond more strongly when participants read vignettes about false beliefs compared to the control vignettes. However, we show that these differences are largely due to linguistic confounds, and no such effects appear in a nonverbal ToM task. These results argue against cognitive and neural overlap between language processing and ToM. In exploratory analyses, we find responses to social processing in the “periphery” of the language network—right-hemisphere homotopes of core language areas and areas in bilateral angular gyri—but these responses are not selectively ToM-related and may reflect general visual semantic processing.

Funder

Simons Foundation to the Simons Center for the Social Brain at MIT

NIH

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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