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Age differences in neural activity related to mentalizing during person perception
Authors:Brittany S. Cassidy  Colleen Hughes  Anne C. Krendl
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina , Greensboro, USA bscassid@uncg.edu"ORCIDhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-1449-0886;3. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University , Bloomington, USA
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Mentalizing, or thinking about others’ mental states, shapes social interactions. Older adults (OA) have reduced mentalizing capacities reflected by lower medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) activation. The current study assessed if OA’ lower mPFC activation reflects less spontaneous mentalizing during person perception. Younger adults (YA) and OA viewed ingroup White and outgroup Black and Asian faces and completed a mentalizing task during fMRI. Afterward, they completed a task in which they inferred mental states from faces. Using an mPFC region defined by the mentalizing task, OA had lower activity than YA during person perception. OA’ mPFC activity toward faces positively related to their mentalizing outside the scanner. The extent of OA’ lower mPFC activation during person perception may depend on their actual detection of mental states in faces. Further, YA’, but not OA’, mPFC activity distinguished between outgroups. OA’ lower mentalizing-related mPFC activity may reduce their ability to individuate outgroup members.
Keywords:Mentalizing  person perception  medial prefrontal cortex  race
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