The role of inferior frontal and parietal areas in differentiating meaningful and meaningless object-directed actions.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Over the past two decades single cell recordings in primates and neuroimaging experiments in humans have uncovered the key properties of visuo-motor mirror neurons located in monkey premotor cortex and parietal cortices as well as homologous areas in the human inferior frontal and inferior parietal cortices which presumably house neurons with similar response properties. One of the most interesting claims regarding the human mirror neuron system (MNS) is that its activity reflects high-level action understanding. If this was the case, one would expect signal in the MNS to differentiate between meaningful and meaningless actions. In the current experiment we tested this prediction using a novel paradigm. Functional magnetic resonance images were collected while participants viewed (i) short films of object-directed actions (ODAs) which were either semantically meaningful, i.e. a hand pressed a stapler or semantically meaningless, i.e. a foot pressed a stapler, (ii) short films of pantomimed actions and (iii) static pictures of objects. Consistent with the notion that the MNS represents high-level action understanding, meaningful and meaningless actions elicited BOLD signal differences at bilateral sites in the supramarginal gyrus (SMG) of the inferior parietal lobule (IPL) where we observed a double dissociation between BOLD response and meaningfullness of actions. Comparison of superadditive responses in the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and IPL (supramarginal) regions revealed differential contributions to action understanding. These data further specify the role of specific components of the MNS in understanding object-directed actions.
منابع مشابه
Semantics in the Motor System: Motor-Cortical Beta Oscillations Reflect Semantic Knowledge of End-Postures for Object Use
In the present EEG study we investigated whether semantic knowledge for object use is represented in motor-related brain areas. Subjects were required to perform actions with everyday objects and to maintain either a meaningful or a meaningless end posture with the object. Analysis of the EEG data focused on the beta-frequency band, as previous studies have indicated that the maintenance of a p...
متن کاملCommon and Differential Neural Mechanisms Supporting Imitation of Meaningful and Meaningless Actions
Neuropsychological studies indicate that, after brain damage, the ability to imitate meaningful or meaningless actions can be selectively impaired. However, the neural bases supporting the imitation of these two types of action are still poorly understood. Using PET, we investigated in 10 healthy individuals the neural mechanisms of imitating novel, meaningless actions and familiar, meaningful ...
متن کاملNeural correlates of transitive and intransitive action imitation: An investigation using voxel-based morphometry
The ability to reproduce visually presented actions has been studied through neuropsychological observations of patients with ideomotor apraxia. These studies include attempts to understand the neural basis of action reproduction based on lesion-symptom mapping in different patient groups. While there is a convergence of evidence that areas in the parietal and frontal lobes within the left hemi...
متن کاملThe ventral fiber pathway for pantomime of object use
The current concept of a dual loop system of brain organization predicts a domain-general dual-pathway architecture involving dorsal and ventral fiber connections. We investigated if a similar dichotomy of brain network organization applies for pantomime (P) and imitation of meaningless gestures (I). Impairments of these tasks occur after left hemispheric brain lesions causing apraxia. Isolated...
متن کاملInteractions between Auditory and Visual Semantic Stimulus Classes: Evidence for Common Processing Networks for Speech and Body Actions
Incongruencies between auditory and visual signals negatively affect human performance and cause selective activation in neuroimaging studies; therefore, they are increasingly used to probe audiovisual integration mechanisms. An open question is whether the increased BOLD response reflects computational demands in integrating mismatching low-level signals or reflects simultaneous unimodal conce...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Brain research
دوره 1315 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2010