Description: Past cognitive neuroscience research has demonstrated that thinking about both the self and other activate the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), a central hub of the default mode network. The mPFC is also implicated in other cognitive processes, such as introspection and autobiographical memory, rendering elusive its exact role during thinking about the self. Specifically, it is unclear whether the same cognitive process explains the common mPFC involvement or distinct processes are responsible for the mPFC activation overlap. In this preregistered functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study with 35 human male and female participants, we investigated whether and to what extent mPFC activation patterns during self-reference judgment could be explained by activation patterns during the tasks of other-reference judgment, introspection, and autobiographical memory. Multi-voxel pattern analysis (MVPA) showed that only in the mPFC, neural responses were both concurrently different and similar across tasks. Furthermore, multiple regression and variance partitioning analyses showed that each task - other-reference, introspection, and memory - uniquely and jointly explained significant variances in mPFC activation during self-reference. These findings suggest that the self-reference task involves multiple cognitive processes shared with other tasks, and the mPFC is the unique place where necessary information is gathered and integrated for judgments based on internally constructed representations.
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