Action observation gives rise to activation in corresponding areas of the premotor and primary motor cortices. We tested the hypothesis that this activation depends on visual-motor connections established through correlated experience of observing and executing the same action. Previous work has shown that hand opening and hand closing gestures are facilitated when subjects observe the movement they are performing, relative to a condition in which they observe a different movement from the one they are performing. Experiment 1 replicated this finding in a simple reaction time (RT) procedure using stimulus-response (SR) movements in orthogonal planes. This implies that the effect is an example of automatic imitation, an instruction-independe...
Recent research in cognitive neuroscience has found that observation of human actions activates the ...
The effector dependence of automatic imitation was investigated using a stimulus-response compatibil...
How does imitation occur? How can the motor plans necessary for imitating an action derive from the ...
Action observation gives rise to activation in corresponding areas of the premotor and primary motor...
Recent behavioural and neuroimaging studies have found that observation of human movement, but not o...
Recent behavioural and neuroimaging studies have found that observation of human movement, but not o...
Two important dimensions of action are the movement and the body part with which the movement is eff...
Automatic imitation is the tendency to reproduce observed actions involutarily. Though this topic ha...
Substantial evidence suggests that observed actions can engage their corresponding motor representat...
We review three areas of research and theory relating to the involvement of motor processing in acti...
By their fourth year of life, children are expert imitators, but it is unclear how this ability deve...
We review three areas of research and theory relating to the involvement of motor processing in acti...
The aim of this study was to pinpoint the nature of the visual features used in the automatic mappin...
We demonstrate that observation of everyday rhythmical actions biases subsequent motor execution of ...
Recent behavioural and neuroimaging studies found that observation of biological action, but not of ...
Recent research in cognitive neuroscience has found that observation of human actions activates the ...
The effector dependence of automatic imitation was investigated using a stimulus-response compatibil...
How does imitation occur? How can the motor plans necessary for imitating an action derive from the ...
Action observation gives rise to activation in corresponding areas of the premotor and primary motor...
Recent behavioural and neuroimaging studies have found that observation of human movement, but not o...
Recent behavioural and neuroimaging studies have found that observation of human movement, but not o...
Two important dimensions of action are the movement and the body part with which the movement is eff...
Automatic imitation is the tendency to reproduce observed actions involutarily. Though this topic ha...
Substantial evidence suggests that observed actions can engage their corresponding motor representat...
We review three areas of research and theory relating to the involvement of motor processing in acti...
By their fourth year of life, children are expert imitators, but it is unclear how this ability deve...
We review three areas of research and theory relating to the involvement of motor processing in acti...
The aim of this study was to pinpoint the nature of the visual features used in the automatic mappin...
We demonstrate that observation of everyday rhythmical actions biases subsequent motor execution of ...
Recent behavioural and neuroimaging studies found that observation of biological action, but not of ...
Recent research in cognitive neuroscience has found that observation of human actions activates the ...
The effector dependence of automatic imitation was investigated using a stimulus-response compatibil...
How does imitation occur? How can the motor plans necessary for imitating an action derive from the ...