TY - JOUR
T1 - Performance monitoring in the medial frontal cortex and related neural networks
T2 - From monitoring self actions to understanding others’ actions
AU - Ninomiya, Taihei
AU - Noritake, Atsushi
AU - Ullsperger, Markus
AU - Isoda, Masaki
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018
PY - 2018/12
Y1 - 2018/12
N2 - Action is a key channel for interacting with the outer world. As such, the ability to monitor actions and their consequences – regardless as to whether they are self-generated or other-generated – is of crucial importance for adaptive behavior. The medial frontal cortex (MFC) has long been studied as a critical node for performance monitoring in nonsocial contexts. Accumulating evidence suggests that the MFC is involved in a wide range of functions necessary for one's own performance monitoring, including error detection, and monitoring and resolving response conflicts. Recent studies, however, have also pointed to the importance of the MFC in performance monitoring under social conditions, ranging from monitoring and understanding others’ actions to reading others’ mental states, such as their beliefs and intentions (i.e., mentalizing). Here we review the functional roles of the MFC and related neural networks in performance monitoring in both nonsocial and social contexts, with an emphasis on the emerging field of a social systems neuroscience approach using macaque monkeys as a model system. Future work should determine the way in which the MFC exerts its monitoring function via interactions with other brain regions, such as the superior temporal sulcus in the mentalizing system and the ventral premotor cortex in the mirror system.
AB - Action is a key channel for interacting with the outer world. As such, the ability to monitor actions and their consequences – regardless as to whether they are self-generated or other-generated – is of crucial importance for adaptive behavior. The medial frontal cortex (MFC) has long been studied as a critical node for performance monitoring in nonsocial contexts. Accumulating evidence suggests that the MFC is involved in a wide range of functions necessary for one's own performance monitoring, including error detection, and monitoring and resolving response conflicts. Recent studies, however, have also pointed to the importance of the MFC in performance monitoring under social conditions, ranging from monitoring and understanding others’ actions to reading others’ mental states, such as their beliefs and intentions (i.e., mentalizing). Here we review the functional roles of the MFC and related neural networks in performance monitoring in both nonsocial and social contexts, with an emphasis on the emerging field of a social systems neuroscience approach using macaque monkeys as a model system. Future work should determine the way in which the MFC exerts its monitoring function via interactions with other brain regions, such as the superior temporal sulcus in the mentalizing system and the ventral premotor cortex in the mirror system.
KW - Actor
KW - Humans
KW - Macaques
KW - Medial frontal cortex
KW - Observer
KW - Other
KW - Performance monitoring
KW - Self
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85046832037&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.neures.2018.04.004
DO - 10.1016/j.neures.2018.04.004
M3 - 総説
C2 - 29709644
AN - SCOPUS:85046832037
SN - 0168-0102
VL - 137
SP - 1
EP - 10
JO - Neuroscience Research
JF - Neuroscience Research
ER -