In humans, recognition of others’ actions involves a cortical network that comprises, among other cortical regions, the posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS), where biological motion is coded and the anterior intraparietal sulcus (aIPS), where movement information is elaborated in terms of meaningful goal-directed actions. This action observation system (AOS) is thought to encode neutral voluntary actions, and possibly some aspects of affective motor repertoire, but the role of the AOS’ areas in processing affective kinematic infor-mation has never been examined. Here we investigated whether the AOS plays a role in representing dynamic emotional bodily expressions. In the first experiment, we assessed behavioral adaptation effects of observed affective movements. Participants watched series of happy or fearful whole-body point-light displays (PLDs) as adapters and were then asked to perform an explicit categorization of the emotion expressed in test PLDs. Participants were slower w...
State-Dependent TMS Reveals Representation of Affective Body Movements in the Anterior Intraparietal Cortex / Mazzoni, N.; Jacobs, C.; Venuti, P.; Silvanto, J.; Cattaneo, L.. - In: THE JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE. - ISSN 1529-2401. - ELETTRONICO. - 37:30(2017), pp. 7231-7239. [10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0913-17.2017]
State-Dependent TMS Reveals Representation of Affective Body Movements in the Anterior Intraparietal Cortex
Mazzoni N.;Venuti P.;Cattaneo L.
2017-01-01
Abstract
In humans, recognition of others’ actions involves a cortical network that comprises, among other cortical regions, the posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS), where biological motion is coded and the anterior intraparietal sulcus (aIPS), where movement information is elaborated in terms of meaningful goal-directed actions. This action observation system (AOS) is thought to encode neutral voluntary actions, and possibly some aspects of affective motor repertoire, but the role of the AOS’ areas in processing affective kinematic infor-mation has never been examined. Here we investigated whether the AOS plays a role in representing dynamic emotional bodily expressions. In the first experiment, we assessed behavioral adaptation effects of observed affective movements. Participants watched series of happy or fearful whole-body point-light displays (PLDs) as adapters and were then asked to perform an explicit categorization of the emotion expressed in test PLDs. Participants were slower w...| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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