Much research has been carried out to understand how human brains make sense of another agent in motion. Current views based on human adult and monkey studies assume a matching process in the motor system biased toward actions performed by conspecifics and present in the observer's motor repertoire. However, little is known about the neural correlates of action cognition in early ontogeny. In this study, we examined the processes involved in the observation of full body movements in 4-month-old infants using functional near-infrared spectroscopy to measure localized brain activation. In a 2 × 2 design, infants watched human or robotic figures moving in a smooth, familiar human-like manner, or in a rigid, unfamiliar robot-like manner. We fou...
Human infants rapidly learn new skills and customs via imitation, but the neural linkages between ac...
Contains fulltext : 89986.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Infants make p...
Supplementary material related to this article can be found, in the online version, at doi: https://...
Much research has been carried out to understand how human brains make sense of another agent in mot...
Much research has been carried out to understand how our brains make sense of another agent in motio...
Much research has been carried out to understand how our brains make sense of another agent in motio...
How specialized is the infant brain for perceiving the facial and manual movements displayed by othe...
The extent to which perception and action share common neural pro-cesses is much debated in cognitiv...
Certain regions of the human brain are activated both during action execution and action observation...
Imitative learning has long been established as extremely important for early development. However, ...
The ability to differentiate one's body from others is a fundamental aspect of social perception and...
The extent to which perception and action share common neural processes is much debated in cognitive...
The extent to which perception and action share common neural processes is much debated in cognitive...
The ability to differentiate one’s body from others is a fundamental aspect of social perception and...
From early on, human infants acquire novel actions through observation and imitation. Yet, the neura...
Human infants rapidly learn new skills and customs via imitation, but the neural linkages between ac...
Contains fulltext : 89986.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Infants make p...
Supplementary material related to this article can be found, in the online version, at doi: https://...
Much research has been carried out to understand how human brains make sense of another agent in mot...
Much research has been carried out to understand how our brains make sense of another agent in motio...
Much research has been carried out to understand how our brains make sense of another agent in motio...
How specialized is the infant brain for perceiving the facial and manual movements displayed by othe...
The extent to which perception and action share common neural pro-cesses is much debated in cognitiv...
Certain regions of the human brain are activated both during action execution and action observation...
Imitative learning has long been established as extremely important for early development. However, ...
The ability to differentiate one's body from others is a fundamental aspect of social perception and...
The extent to which perception and action share common neural processes is much debated in cognitive...
The extent to which perception and action share common neural processes is much debated in cognitive...
The ability to differentiate one’s body from others is a fundamental aspect of social perception and...
From early on, human infants acquire novel actions through observation and imitation. Yet, the neura...
Human infants rapidly learn new skills and customs via imitation, but the neural linkages between ac...
Contains fulltext : 89986.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Infants make p...
Supplementary material related to this article can be found, in the online version, at doi: https://...