News Express: UM achieves significant advances in research on oxytocin and social cognitive neuroscience
新聞快訊:澳大在催產素與社會認知大腦領域取得重要進展
研究核心結構
The main structure of the study
澳大在催產素與社會認知大腦領域取得重要進展
澳門大學認知與腦科學研究中心助理教授伍海燕的研究團隊在催產素與社會認知大腦研究領域取得重要進展,為催產素如何影響個體差異提供了新的證據和相應的機制,也為未來臨床和非臨床應用催產素的研究提供啟示。研究成果被多部國際著名期刊如Human Brain Mapping接收。
催產素作為一種重要的神經肽,已被證明與社會適應、親社會行為及社會認知密切相關。在行為水準上,催產素可以調節人類對面孔、情緒等社會線索的識別和記憶能力。尤其針對面孔而言,有研究者發現催產素可以增強對於面孔刺激記憶,並且提高杏仁核對於情緒面孔的響應。另外,以往研究發現其可以促進社會連結,改善社交互動,調控社會認知過程中凸顯資訊的加工。
自我—他人區分(self-other distinction)在人們的日常社會交互和決策中起到至關重要的作用。同時,在作出自我或他人相關的社會決策時,面孔是最為凸顯的刺激,人們會通過他人面孔和自我面孔的相似性來調整利他行為和相關的經濟決策。
研究團隊深入探討了催產素對個體的功能連接和行為之間關聯的影響,發現催產素會顯著增強靜息態功能連接、任務態功能連接和任務行為表現三者之間的聯繫(圖1);並進一步發現三者之間聯繫的增強可以部分解釋為催產素改變了大腦在靜息態和任務態下的功能連接,主要涉及到邊緣系統、前額葉皮層、顳極和顳頂葉交界處等區域。
該研究使用基於功能連接的預測模型(CPM)來檢驗不同狀態下的功能連接是否能夠預測任務中的行為表現(圖2),以及催產素是否能夠提高功能連接對行為表現的預測準確性,最後在全腦水準上進行了靜息態和任務態功能連接之間的相關性分析,以評估催產素對兩種狀態下的功能連接之間關係的影響。CPM可以基於功能連接預測認知行為或人格特質等,已廣泛用於全腦關聯研究(BWAS)。它經常被用來從功能連接中提取最相關的特徵來預測行為、人格特質或精神症狀的個體變異性。先前的許多研究已經證明了CPM在預測流體智力、注意力、創造能力、作弊行為等方面的個體差異的魯棒性。
研究發現,無論是靜息態還是任務態,施加催產素的群體的CPM預測模型的正確率顯著高於施加安慰劑的群體(圖3);並且在施加催產素的群體中,靜息態和任務態功能連接之間的關聯顯著比施加安慰劑的群體更強(圖4)。研究團隊進一步發現在任務態和靜息態中,CPM分類模型可以顯著區分催產素群體和安慰劑群體的功能連接,且施加催產素的群體中,大部分在CPM分類模型裡權重較大的功能連接都與行為表現顯著相關聯,而在施加安慰劑的群體中則沒有發現這種效應(圖5和圖6)。這些結果為神經肽如何導致不同水準的個體差異之間的關聯增加提供了新的證據和相應的機制,並可能啟發未來對神經肽在臨床和非臨床應用的交叉研究。
該研究的共同第一作者為澳大認知與腦科學研究中心博士生張皓銘和陳坤,其他貢獻合作者還包括中國科學院深圳先進技術研究院研究員鮑進。研究得到澳門特別行政區科技發展基金(檔案編號:0127/2020/A3,0041/2022/A)、廣東省自然科學基金(檔案編號:2021A1515012509)、深港澳科技創新項目(檔案編號:SGDX2020110309280100)、澳門大學SRG(檔案編號:SRG2020-00027-ICI)、澳門大學MYRG(檔案編號:MYRG2022-00188-ICI)資助。全文可瀏覽:https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.26498。
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https://www.um.edu.mo/zh-hant/news-and-press-releases/presss-release/detail/57153/
UM achieves significant advances in research on oxytocin and social cognitive neuroscience
A research team led by Wu Haiyan, assistant professor at the Centre for Cognitive and Brain Sciences of the University of Macau (UM), has achieved significant advances in the field of oxytocin and social cognitive neuroscience. Their research provides new evidence and a corresponding mechanism on how oxytocin causes increased associations among inter-individual differences, and also provides inspirations for future research on the clinical and non-clinical applications of oxytocin. The research results have been accepted by several internationally renowned journals, such as Human Brain Mapping.
Oxytocin, an important neuropeptide, has been proven to be closely linked to social adaptation, pro-social behaviours, and social cognition. At the behavioural level, oxytocin can modulate human abilities in recognising and memorising social cues such as faces and emotions. Specifically, some researchers have found that oxytocin can boost recognition memory for faces and increase amygdala responses to emotional faces. In addition, previous studies have shown that oxytocin can promote social bonding, navigate social interactions, and regulate the processing of salient information.
Self-other distinction plays a crucial role in daily social interactions and decision-making. Moreover, faces serve as the most salient stimuli in making social decisions that involve oneself or others. People adjust their altruistic behaviours and corresponding economic decisions according to the similarity between their faces and those of others.
The research team investigated the effects of oxytocin on the relationship between individuals’ functional connectivity and behaviour. They found that oxytocin significantly enhances the links between resting-state functional connectivity, task-state functional connectivity, and task behaviour performance. Subsequent analysis further revealed that the enhancement in these connections can be explained in part by the fact that oxytocin alters the functional connectivity of the brain in both resting and task states, mainly involving areas such as the limbic system, the prefrontal cortex, the temporal pole, and the temporoparietal junction.
The study employed a connectome-based predictive model (CPM) to examine whether functional connectivity in different states can predict task behaviour performance, and whether oxytocin can improve the prediction accuracy of functional connectivity in behavioural performance. A correlation analysis was conducted at the whole-brain level to assess the correlation between resting-state and task-state functional connectivity, and evaluate the effect of oxytocin on the relationship between functional connectivity in the two states. CPM can predict cognitive behaviour or personality traits on the basis of functional connectivity and has been widely used in brain-wide association studies (BWAS). It is often used to extract the most relevant features from functional connectivity in order to predict individual variability in behaviour, personality traits, or psychiatric symptoms. Many previous studies have demonstrated the robustness of CPM in predicting individual differences in fluid intelligence, attention, creativity, and cheating behaviours.
The study found that the group administered with oxytocin demonstrated significantly higher predictive accuracy in CPM compared to those administered with a placebo, in both resting and task states. Furthermore, the correlation between resting-state and task-state functional connectivity was notably stronger in the oxytocin group compared to the placebo group. Additional findings indicated that the CPM classifier could significantly distinguish the functional connectivity between oxytocin and placebo groups in both task and resting states. In the oxytocin group, most of the functional connections with larger weights in the CPM classifier were significantly correlated with behavioural performance, an effect not observed in the placebo group. These findings provide new evidence and a corresponding mechanism for how neuropeptides contribute to increased associations among inter-individual differences across different levels. They may inspire future interdisciplinary research on the clinical and non-clinical applications of neuropeptides.
Zhang Haoming and Chen Kun, PhD students at UM’s Centre for Cognitive and Brain Sciences are the co-first authors of the study. Bao Jin, a researcher at the Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, also contributed to the study. The research project was supported by the Science and Technology Development Fund of the Macao SAR (File no: 0127/2020/A3 and 0041/2022/A), the Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province (File no: 2021A1515012509), the Shenzhen-Hong Kong-Macao Science and Technology Innovation Project (Category C) (File no: SGDX2020110309280100), the Start-up Research Grant of UM (File no: SRG2020-00027-ICI), and the Multi-Year Research Grant of UM (File no: MYRG2022-00188-ICI). The full version of the research article can be viewed at https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.26498.
To read the news on UM’s official website, please visit the following link:
https://www.um.edu.mo/news-and-press-releases/press-release/detail/57153/