Authors
Clare Press, Helge Gillmeister, Cecilia Heyes
Publication date
2007/10/22
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
274
Issue
1625
Pages
2509-2514
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Recent research in cognitive neuroscience has found that observation of human actions activates the ‘mirror system’ and provokes automatic imitation to a greater extent than observation of non-biological movements. The present study investigated whether this human bias depends primarily on phylogenetic or ontogenetic factors by examining the effects of sensorimotor experience on automatic imitation of non-biological robotic, stimuli. Automatic imitation of human and robotic action stimuli was assessed before and after training. During these test sessions, participants were required to execute a pre-specified response (e.g. to open their hand) while observing a human or robotic hand making a compatible (opening) or incompatible (closing) movement. During training, participants executed opening and closing hand actions while observing compatible (group CT) or incompatible movements (group IT) of a robotic …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
C Press, H Gillmeister, C Heyes - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological …, 2007