Cyclical upper limb movement can involuntarily deviate from its primary movement axis when the performer concurrently observes incongruent biological motion (i.e. interpersonal observation-execution). The current study examined the social modulation of such involuntary motor interference using a protocol that reflected everyday social interactions encountered in a naturalistic social setting. Eighteen participants executed cyclical horizontal arm movements during the observation of horizontal (congruent) or curvilinear (incongruent) biological motion. Both prior to, and during the interpersonal observation-execution task, participants also received a series of social words designed to prime a pro-social or anti-social attitude. The results ...
Contains fulltext : 175249.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mimicry of ot...
Cyclical upper-limb movements involuntarily deviate from a primary movement direction when the actor...
IntroductionIn psychiatry, behavioral therapies do not focus on motor behaviors embedded in social i...
Cyclical upper limb movement can involuntarily deviate from its primary movement axis when the perfo...
Cyclical upper-limb movement can involuntarily deviate from its primary movement axis when the perfo...
Social primes (pro-social, anti-social) can modulate mimicry behaviour. To date, these social modula...
Social primes (pro-social, anti-social) can modulate mimicry behaviour. To date, these social modula...
Cyclical upper-limb movements involuntarily deviate from a primary movement direction when the actor...
Cyclical upper-limb movements involuntarily deviate from a primary movement direction when the actor...
Sensorimotor experiences can modify the internal models for action. These modifications can govern t...
The tendency to mimic the behaviour of others is affected by a variety of social factors, and it has...
As a distinct feature of human social interactions, spontaneous mimicry has been widely investigated...
Imitation has been hailed as ‘social glue’, facilitating rapport with others. Previous studies sugge...
Action observation and execution share overlapping neural substrates, so that simultaneous activatio...
One remarkable feature of social interactions is spontaneous mimicry. People have a tendency to unco...
Contains fulltext : 175249.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mimicry of ot...
Cyclical upper-limb movements involuntarily deviate from a primary movement direction when the actor...
IntroductionIn psychiatry, behavioral therapies do not focus on motor behaviors embedded in social i...
Cyclical upper limb movement can involuntarily deviate from its primary movement axis when the perfo...
Cyclical upper-limb movement can involuntarily deviate from its primary movement axis when the perfo...
Social primes (pro-social, anti-social) can modulate mimicry behaviour. To date, these social modula...
Social primes (pro-social, anti-social) can modulate mimicry behaviour. To date, these social modula...
Cyclical upper-limb movements involuntarily deviate from a primary movement direction when the actor...
Cyclical upper-limb movements involuntarily deviate from a primary movement direction when the actor...
Sensorimotor experiences can modify the internal models for action. These modifications can govern t...
The tendency to mimic the behaviour of others is affected by a variety of social factors, and it has...
As a distinct feature of human social interactions, spontaneous mimicry has been widely investigated...
Imitation has been hailed as ‘social glue’, facilitating rapport with others. Previous studies sugge...
Action observation and execution share overlapping neural substrates, so that simultaneous activatio...
One remarkable feature of social interactions is spontaneous mimicry. People have a tendency to unco...
Contains fulltext : 175249.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mimicry of ot...
Cyclical upper-limb movements involuntarily deviate from a primary movement direction when the actor...
IntroductionIn psychiatry, behavioral therapies do not focus on motor behaviors embedded in social i...