Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
920033 Acta Psychologica 2011 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

In the present study, we investigate whether reading an action-word can influence subsequent visual perception of biological motion. The participant's task was to perceptually judge whether a human action identifiable in the biological motion of a point-light display embedded in a high density mask was present or not in the visual sequence, which lasted for 633 ms on average. Prior to the judgement task, participants were exposed to an abstract verb or an action verb for 500 ms, which was related to the human action according to a congruent or incongruent semantic relation. Data analysis showed that correct judgements were not affected by action verbs, whereas a facilitation effect on response time (49 ms on average) was observed when a congruent action verb primed the judgement of biological movements. In relation with the existing literature, this finding suggests that the perception, the planning and the linguistic coding of motor action are subtended by common motor representations.

Research highlights► Action observation and action production rely on shared representations. ► Action-related language and action production rely also on shared representations. ► We examined whether prior exposition to action words affects action observation. ► Detection of masked human action is facilitated when primed by congruent action word. ► This agrees with shared representations for action observation and action-related words.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Cognitive Neuroscience
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