نتایج جستجو برای: mirror neurons

تعداد نتایج: 193820  

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2012
Maël Lebreton Shadia Kawa Baudouin Forgeot d'Arc Jean Daunizeau Mathias Pessiglione

The spread of desires among individuals is widely believed to shape motivational drives in human populations. However, objective evidence for this phenomenon and insights into the underlying brain mechanisms are still lacking. Here we show that participants rated objects as more desirable once perceived as the goals of another agent's action. We then unravel the mechanisms underpinning such goa...

Journal: :The Neuroscientist : a review journal bringing neurobiology, neurology and psychiatry 2011
Antonino Casile Vittorio Caggiano Pier Francesco Ferrari

Mirror neurons are a class of visuomotor neurons in the monkey premotor and parietal cortices that discharge during the execution and observation of goal-directed motor acts. They are deemed to be at the basis of primates' social abilities. In this review, the authors provide a fresh view about two still open questions about mirror neurons. The first question is their possible functional role. ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
Michèle Belot Vincent P Crawford Cecilia Heyes

There is a large body of evidence of apparently spontaneous mimicry in humans. This phenomenon has been described as "automatic imitation" and attributed to a mirror neuron system, but there is little direct evidence that it is involuntary rather than intentional. Cook et al. supplied the first such evidence in a unique strategic game design that gave all subjects a pecuniary incentive to avoid...

Journal: :Social neuroscience 2010
Anat Perry Nikolaus F Troje Shlomo Bentin

Putative contributions of a human mirror neuron system (hMNS) to the perception of social information have been assessed by measuring the suppression of EEG oscillations in the mu/alpha (8-12 Hz), beta (15-25 Hz) and low-gamma (25-25 Hz) ranges while participants processed social information revealed by point-light displays of human motion. Identical dynamic displays were presented and particip...

Journal: :The European journal of neuroscience 2010
Shirley Fecteau Jose Maria Tormos Massimo Gangitano Hugo Théoret Alvaro Pascual-Leone

The observation of an action modulates motor cortical outputs in specific ways, in part through mediation of the mirror neuron system. Sometimes we infer a meaning to an observed action based on integration of the actual percept with memories. Here, we conducted a series of experiments in healthy adults to investigate whether such inferred meanings can also modulate motor cortical outputs in sp...

Journal: :Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience 2012
Markus Paulus Sabine Hunnius Michiel van Elk Harold Bekkering

Bidirectional action-effect associations play a fundamental role in intentional action control and the development of the mirror neuron system. However, it has been questioned if infants are able to acquire bidirectional action-effect associations (i.e., are able to intentionally control their actions). To investigate this, we trained 8-month-old infants for one week to use a novel rattle that ...

Journal: :Physics of life reviews 2015
Alessandro D'Ausilio Eleonora Bartoli Laura Maffongelli

The discovery of mirror neurons revived interest in motor theories of perception, fostering a number of new studies as well as controversies. In particular, the degree of motor specificity with which others' actions are simulated is highly debated. Human corticospinal excitability studies support the conjecture that a mirror mechanism encodes object-directed goals or low-level kinematic feature...

Journal: :Social cognitive and affective neuroscience 2006
Istvan Molnar-Szakacs Katie Overy

The ability to create and enjoy music is a universal human trait and plays an important role in the daily life of most cultures. Music has a unique ability to trigger memories, awaken emotions and to intensify our social experiences. We do not need to be trained in music performance or appreciation to be able to reap its benefits-already as infants, we relate to it spontaneously and effortlessl...

Journal: :Current opinion in neurobiology 2006
Atsushi Iriki

Several recent studies report how laboratory-raised, non-human primates exposed to tool use can exhibit intelligent behaviors, such as imitation and reference vocal control, that are never seen in their wild counterparts. Tool-use training appears to forge a novel cortico-cortical connection that underlies this boost in capacity, which normally exists only as latent potential in lower primates....

2005
Colin Allen

Here are three mutually incompatible propositions: 1. To understand the intentional actions of others requires knowledge of the intentional states (i.e., beliefs and desires) which (rationally) motivated those actions. 2. Monkeys do not have knowledge of the intentional states (beliefs and desires) motivating the actions of others. 3. Monkeys understand the intentional actions of other monkeys....

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