Meaning in hand: Investigating shared mechanisms of motor imagery and sensorimotor simulation in language processing

IF 2.8 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL Cognition Pub Date : 2023-08-09 DOI:10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105589
Emiko J. Muraki , Stephan F. Dahm , Penny M. Pexman
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

There is substantial evidence to support grounded theories of semantic representation, however the mechanisms of simulation in most theories are underspecified. In the present study, we used an individual differences approach to test whether motor imagery may share some mechanisms with sensorimotor simulations engaged during semantic processing. We quantified individual differences in motor imagery ability via implicit imagery tasks and explicit imagery questionnaires and tested their relationship to sensorimotor effects in syntactic classification tasks. In Experiment 1 (N = 185) we tested relationships between motor imagery and semantic processing of body-object interaction meaning (BOI; the degree to which you can interact with a word's referent) and foot/leg action meaning. We observed two interactions between imagery ability measured on the Florida Praxis Imagery Questionnaire (FPIQ) and BOI effects in semantic processing (response time and accuracy). In both interactions poorer imagery ability was associated with null BOI effects, whereas better imagery was associated with BOI effects. We also observed faster and more accurate responses to verbs associated with more foot/leg action meaning than verbs with less foot/leg action meaning, but this foot/leg action effect did not significantly interact with individual differences in motor imagery. In Experiment 2 (N = 195) we tested whether the interactions observed in Experiment 1 were dependent on the object-directed nature of the actions, or whether similar effects would be observed for hand actions not associated with objects. We also expanded our investigation beyond hand and foot imagery to consider whole body imagery. We observed an interaction between performance on a hand laterality judgement task (HLJT; assessing hand motor imagery) and sensorimotor effects in semantic processing of verbs associated with hand/arm action meaning. Participants with the fastest responses on the most difficult trials of the HLJT showed no significant difference in their response times to words with high and low hand/arm action meaning. We also observed faster and more accurate responses to high relative to low embodiment verbs, but this sensorimotor effect did not interact with individual differences in motor imagery. The results suggest specific (and not general) associations, in that some, but not all forms of hand and object-directed motor imagery are related to sensorimotor effects in language processing of hand/arm action verbs and nouns describing objects that are easy to interact with. As such, hand and object-directed motor imagery may share mechanisms with sensorimotor simulation during semantic processing.

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意义在手:研究语言处理中运动意象和感觉运动模拟的共同机制
有大量证据支持语义表示的基础理论,但大多数理论中的模拟机制都没有明确说明。在本研究中,我们使用个体差异方法来测试运动图像是否与语义处理过程中的感觉运动模拟共享一些机制。我们通过内隐意象任务和外显意象问卷量化了运动意象能力的个体差异,并在句法分类任务中测试了它们与感觉运动效应的关系。在实验1(N=185)中,我们测试了运动意象与身体-物体交互意义(BOI;你可以与单词的指称交互的程度)和脚/腿动作意义的语义处理之间的关系。我们观察到在佛罗里达实践意象问卷(FPIQ)上测量的意象能力和BOI在语义处理中的影响(反应时间和准确性)之间的两种相互作用。在这两种交互中,较差的成像能力与零BOI效应相关,而较好的成像能力则与BOI效应有关。我们还观察到,与脚/腿动作含义较少的动词相比,对脚/腿行动含义较多的动词的反应更快、更准确,但这种脚/腿行为效应与运动意象的个体差异没有显著相互作用。在实验2中(N=195),我们测试了在实验1中观察到的相互作用是否取决于动作的对象导向性质,或者对于与对象无关的手部动作是否会观察到类似的效果。我们还将调查范围扩大到手和脚的图像之外,以考虑全身图像。我们观察到手的偏侧性判断任务(HLJT;评估手运动意象)的表现与与手/臂动作意义相关动词的语义处理中的感觉运动效应之间的相互作用。在HLJT最困难的试验中,反应最快的参与者对具有高手/低臂动作含义的单词的反应时间没有显著差异。我们还观察到,相对于低体现动词,对高体现动词的反应更快、更准确,但这种感觉运动效应与运动意象的个体差异无关。研究结果表明,在描述易于互动的物体的手/臂动作动词和名词的语言处理中,一些但不是所有形式的手和物体定向运动意象都与感觉运动效应有关。因此,在语义处理过程中,手和物体定向的运动图像可以与感觉运动模拟共享机制。
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来源期刊
Cognition
Cognition PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
5.90%
发文量
283
期刊介绍: Cognition is an international journal that publishes theoretical and experimental papers on the study of the mind. It covers a wide variety of subjects concerning all the different aspects of cognition, ranging from biological and experimental studies to formal analysis. Contributions from the fields of psychology, neuroscience, linguistics, computer science, mathematics, ethology and philosophy are welcome in this journal provided that they have some bearing on the functioning of the mind. In addition, the journal serves as a forum for discussion of social and political aspects of cognitive science.
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