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. 2018 Nov 20;37:100598. doi: 10.1016/j.dcn.2018.11.002

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Functional Timecourses during “The Present.” a) The average timecourse per age group for the ToM network (top) and Pain matrix (bottom), during viewing of Jacob Frey’s “The Present” (2014). Each timepoint along the x-axis corresponds to a single TR (800 ms); the entire movie was 250 TRs (<4 min). Shaded blocks show timepoints identified as ToM (red) and Pain (green) events in a reverse correlation analysis conducted on adolescent/young adult participants (13–20 year olds; n = 55); timepoints within the gray block were not analyzed. Dark red and green borders show timepoints identified as ToM and pain events, respectively, in 5-year-old children (n = 16). Event labels (e.g., T01, P01) indicate ranking of average peak magnitude of response in adolescents/young adults. Black asterisk indicates significant positive correlation between peak magnitude of response and age (continuous variable) among children, after correcting for multiple comparisons (10 ToM/Pain events, α = .005). Red asterisk indicates significant positive correlation between peak magnitude of response and SCQ score (continuous variable) among children; this correlation does not survive correcting for multiple comparisons (7 ToM events; α = .007, p = .02). b) Example frames and descriptions for the five events with the highest magnitude of response in adolescents/young adults, per network (see Supplementary Fig. 5 for all events, and Supplementary Table 1 for full event descriptions and timing and duration information). Thumbnail images used with permission from Jacob Frey (For interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article).