Data di Pubblicazione:
2012
Abstract:
We investigated motor resonance in children using a priming paradigm.
Participants were asked to judge the weight of an object shortly primed by a hand in an actionrelated
posture (grasp) or a non action-related one (fist). The hand prime could belong to a
child or to an adult. We found faster response times when the object was preceded by a grasp
hand posture (motor resonance effect). More crucially, participants were faster when the prime
was a child's hand, suggesting that it could belong to their body schema, particularly when the
child's hand was followed by a light object (motor simulation effect). A control experiment
helped us to clarify the role of the hand prime. To our knowledge this is the first behavioural
evidence of motor simulation and motor resonance in children. Implications of the results for
the development of the sense of body ownership and for conceptual development are discussed.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Motor resonance; Motor simulation; Visuomotor priming; Body schema; Embodied cognition.
Elenco autori:
Borghi, ANNA MARIA
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