Authors
Clare Press, Geoffrey Bird, Rüdiger Flach, Cecilia Heyes
Publication date
2005/12/1
Journal
Cognitive brain research
Volume
25
Issue
3
Pages
632-640
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Recent behavioural and neuroimaging studies have found that observation of human movement, but not of robotic movement, gives rise to visuomotor priming. This implies that the ‘mirror neuron’ or ‘action observation–execution matching’ system in the premotor and parietal cortices is entirely unresponsive to robotic movement. The present study investigated this hypothesis using an ‘automatic imitation’ stimulus–response compatibility procedure. Participants were required to perform a prespecified movement (e.g. opening their hand) on presentation of a human or robotic hand in the terminal posture of a compatible movement (opened) or an incompatible movement (closed). Both the human and the robotic stimuli elicited automatic imitation; the prespecified action was initiated faster when it was cued by the compatible movement stimulus than when it was cued by the incompatible movement stimulus. However …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
C Press, G Bird, R Flach, C Heyes - Cognitive brain research, 2005