Actions can be planned and recognized at different hierarchical levels, ranging from very specific (e.g., to swim breaststroke) to very broad (e.g., locomotion). Understanding the corresponding neural representation is an important prerequisite to reveal how our brain flexibly assigns meaning to the world around us. To address this question, we conducted an event-related fMRI study in male and female human participants in which we examined distinct representations of observed actions at the subordinate, basic and superordinate level. Utilizing multiple regression representational similarity analysis in predefined regions of interest, we found that the three different taxonomic levels were best captured by patterns of activations in bilatera...
Everyday human cognition and behavior is accomplished via the coordinated efforts of numerous comple...
The ability to recognize actions is important for cognitive development and social cognition. Areas ...
Social species spend considerable time observing the body movements of others to understand their ac...
Categorizing and understanding other people's actions is a key human capability. Whereas there exist...
How the human brain represents distinct motor features into a unique finalized action still remains ...
When we observe other people's actions, a network of temporal, parietal and frontal regions is recru...
International audienceRepresentation of body and body movements is essential for identifying others ...
We can make good decisions by capturing and exploiting the structure of the natural world. It is tho...
How the human brain represents distinct motor features into a unique finalized action still remains ...
& Human concepts can be roughly divided into entities (prototypically referred to in language by...
How do we understand the actions of others? To solve this problem, the brain relies on multiple, hie...
Action and language have been proposed to rely on similar hierarchical principles of structural comp...
Action observation is supported by a network of regions in occipito-temporal, parietal, and premotor...
Many earlier human functional MRI (fMRI) studies that investigated the neural circuits involved in s...
Everyday human cognition and behavior is accomplished via the coordinated efforts of numerous comple...
Everyday human cognition and behavior is accomplished via the coordinated efforts of numerous comple...
The ability to recognize actions is important for cognitive development and social cognition. Areas ...
Social species spend considerable time observing the body movements of others to understand their ac...
Categorizing and understanding other people's actions is a key human capability. Whereas there exist...
How the human brain represents distinct motor features into a unique finalized action still remains ...
When we observe other people's actions, a network of temporal, parietal and frontal regions is recru...
International audienceRepresentation of body and body movements is essential for identifying others ...
We can make good decisions by capturing and exploiting the structure of the natural world. It is tho...
How the human brain represents distinct motor features into a unique finalized action still remains ...
& Human concepts can be roughly divided into entities (prototypically referred to in language by...
How do we understand the actions of others? To solve this problem, the brain relies on multiple, hie...
Action and language have been proposed to rely on similar hierarchical principles of structural comp...
Action observation is supported by a network of regions in occipito-temporal, parietal, and premotor...
Many earlier human functional MRI (fMRI) studies that investigated the neural circuits involved in s...
Everyday human cognition and behavior is accomplished via the coordinated efforts of numerous comple...
Everyday human cognition and behavior is accomplished via the coordinated efforts of numerous comple...
The ability to recognize actions is important for cognitive development and social cognition. Areas ...
Social species spend considerable time observing the body movements of others to understand their ac...