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Investigation of Brain Activation Patterns Related to the Feminization or Masculinization of Body and Face Images across Genders

Previous studies demonstrated sex-related differences in several areas of the human brain, including patterns of brain activation in males and females when observing their own bodies and faces (versus other bodies/faces or morphed versions of themselves), but a complex paradigm touching multiple asp...

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Autores principales: Ceruti, Carlo, Cicerale, Alessandro, Diano, Matteo, Sibona, Mattia, Guiot, Caterina, Motta, Giovanna, Crespi, Chiara, Gualerzi, Anna, Lanfranco, Fabio, Bergui, Mauro, D’Agata, Federico
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9416062/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36006074
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/tomography8040176
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author Ceruti, Carlo
Cicerale, Alessandro
Diano, Matteo
Sibona, Mattia
Guiot, Caterina
Motta, Giovanna
Crespi, Chiara
Gualerzi, Anna
Lanfranco, Fabio
Bergui, Mauro
D’Agata, Federico
author_facet Ceruti, Carlo
Cicerale, Alessandro
Diano, Matteo
Sibona, Mattia
Guiot, Caterina
Motta, Giovanna
Crespi, Chiara
Gualerzi, Anna
Lanfranco, Fabio
Bergui, Mauro
D’Agata, Federico
author_sort Ceruti, Carlo
collection PubMed
description Previous studies demonstrated sex-related differences in several areas of the human brain, including patterns of brain activation in males and females when observing their own bodies and faces (versus other bodies/faces or morphed versions of themselves), but a complex paradigm touching multiple aspects of embodied self-identity is still lacking. We enrolled 24 healthy individuals (12 M, 12 F) in 3 different fMRI experiments: the vision of prototypical body silhouettes, the vision of static images of the face of the participants morphed with prototypical male and female faces, the vision of short videos showing the dynamic transformation of the morphing. We found differential sexual activations in areas linked to self-identity and to the ability to attribute mental states: In Experiment 1, the male group activated more the bilateral thalamus when looking at sex congruent body images, while the female group activated more the middle and inferior temporal gyrus. In Experiment 2, the male group activated more the supplementary motor area when looking at their faces; the female group activated more the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC). In Experiment 3, the female group activated more the dmPFC when observing either the feminization or the masculinization of their face. The defeminization produced more activations in females in the left superior parietal lobule and middle occipital gyrus. The performance of all classifiers built using single ROIs exceeded chance level, reaching an area under the ROC curves > 0.85 in some cases (notably, for Experiment 2 using the V1 ROI). The results of the fMRI tasks showed good agreement with previously published studies, even if our sample size was small. Therefore, our functional MRI protocol showed significantly different patterns of activation in males and females, but further research is needed both to investigate the gender-related differences in activation when observing a morphing of their face/body, and to validate our paradigm using a larger sample.
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spelling pubmed-94160622022-08-27 Investigation of Brain Activation Patterns Related to the Feminization or Masculinization of Body and Face Images across Genders Ceruti, Carlo Cicerale, Alessandro Diano, Matteo Sibona, Mattia Guiot, Caterina Motta, Giovanna Crespi, Chiara Gualerzi, Anna Lanfranco, Fabio Bergui, Mauro D’Agata, Federico Tomography Article Previous studies demonstrated sex-related differences in several areas of the human brain, including patterns of brain activation in males and females when observing their own bodies and faces (versus other bodies/faces or morphed versions of themselves), but a complex paradigm touching multiple aspects of embodied self-identity is still lacking. We enrolled 24 healthy individuals (12 M, 12 F) in 3 different fMRI experiments: the vision of prototypical body silhouettes, the vision of static images of the face of the participants morphed with prototypical male and female faces, the vision of short videos showing the dynamic transformation of the morphing. We found differential sexual activations in areas linked to self-identity and to the ability to attribute mental states: In Experiment 1, the male group activated more the bilateral thalamus when looking at sex congruent body images, while the female group activated more the middle and inferior temporal gyrus. In Experiment 2, the male group activated more the supplementary motor area when looking at their faces; the female group activated more the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC). In Experiment 3, the female group activated more the dmPFC when observing either the feminization or the masculinization of their face. The defeminization produced more activations in females in the left superior parietal lobule and middle occipital gyrus. The performance of all classifiers built using single ROIs exceeded chance level, reaching an area under the ROC curves > 0.85 in some cases (notably, for Experiment 2 using the V1 ROI). The results of the fMRI tasks showed good agreement with previously published studies, even if our sample size was small. Therefore, our functional MRI protocol showed significantly different patterns of activation in males and females, but further research is needed both to investigate the gender-related differences in activation when observing a morphing of their face/body, and to validate our paradigm using a larger sample. MDPI 2022-08-22 /pmc/articles/PMC9416062/ /pubmed/36006074 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/tomography8040176 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Ceruti, Carlo
Cicerale, Alessandro
Diano, Matteo
Sibona, Mattia
Guiot, Caterina
Motta, Giovanna
Crespi, Chiara
Gualerzi, Anna
Lanfranco, Fabio
Bergui, Mauro
D’Agata, Federico
Investigation of Brain Activation Patterns Related to the Feminization or Masculinization of Body and Face Images across Genders
title Investigation of Brain Activation Patterns Related to the Feminization or Masculinization of Body and Face Images across Genders
title_full Investigation of Brain Activation Patterns Related to the Feminization or Masculinization of Body and Face Images across Genders
title_fullStr Investigation of Brain Activation Patterns Related to the Feminization or Masculinization of Body and Face Images across Genders
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of Brain Activation Patterns Related to the Feminization or Masculinization of Body and Face Images across Genders
title_short Investigation of Brain Activation Patterns Related to the Feminization or Masculinization of Body and Face Images across Genders
title_sort investigation of brain activation patterns related to the feminization or masculinization of body and face images across genders
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9416062/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36006074
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/tomography8040176
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