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      You can count on the motor cortex: Finger counting habits modulate motor cortex activation evoked by numbers

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          Abstract

          The embodied cognition framework suggests that neural systems for perception and action are engaged during higher cognitive processes. In an event-related fMRI study, we tested this claim for the abstract domain of numerical symbol processing: is the human cortical motor system part of the representation of numbers, and is organization of numerical knowledge influenced by individual finger counting habits? Developmental studies suggest a link between numerals and finger counting habits due to the acquisition of numerical skills through finger counting in childhood. In the present study, digits 1 to 9 and the corresponding number words were presented visually to adults with different finger counting habits, i.e. left- and right-starters who reported that they usually start counting small numbers with their left and right hand, respectively. Despite the absence of overt hand movements, the hemisphere contralateral to the hand used for counting small numbers was activated when small numbers were presented. The correspondence between finger counting habits and hemispheric motor activation is consistent with an intrinsic functional link between finger counting and number processing .

          Highlights

          ►Individual finger counting habits modulate motor cortex activation to numbers. ►Small digits activate motor areas contralateral to the hand used in finger counting. ►Number processing is grounded in individual experience related to finger counting. ►Abstract symbol processing is embodied in perceptual-motor brain networks.

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          Most cited references50

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          Grounded cognition.

          Grounded cognition rejects traditional views that cognition is computation on amodal symbols in a modular system, independent of the brain's modal systems for perception, action, and introspection. Instead, grounded cognition proposes that modal simulations, bodily states, and situated action underlie cognition. Accumulating behavioral and neural evidence supporting this view is reviewed from research on perception, memory, knowledge, language, thought, social cognition, and development. Theories of grounded cognition are also reviewed, as are origins of the area and common misperceptions of it. Theoretical, empirical, and methodological issues are raised whose future treatment is likely to affect the growth and impact of grounded cognition.
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            Cultural recycling of cortical maps.

            Part of human cortex is specialized for cultural domains such as reading and arithmetic, whose invention is too recent to have influenced the evolution of our species. Representations of letter strings and of numbers occupy reproducible locations within large-scale macromaps, respectively in the left occipito-temporal and bilateral intraparietal cortex. Furthermore, recent fMRI studies reveal a systematic architecture within these areas. To explain this paradoxical cerebral invariance of cultural maps, we propose a neuronal recycling hypothesis, according to which cultural inventions invade evolutionarily older brain circuits and inherit many of their structural constraints.
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              Active perception: sensorimotor circuits as a cortical basis for language.

              Action and perception are functionally linked in the brain, but a hotly debated question is whether perception and comprehension of stimuli depend on motor circuits. Brain language mechanisms are ideal for addressing this question. Neuroimaging investigations have found specific motor activations when subjects understand speech sounds, word meanings and sentence structures. Moreover, studies involving transcranial magnetic stimulation and patients with lesions affecting inferior frontal regions of the brain have shown contributions of motor circuits to the comprehension of phonemes, semantic categories and grammar. These data show that language comprehension benefits from frontocentral action systems, indicating that action and perception circuits are interdependent.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Neuroimage
                Neuroimage
                Neuroimage
                Academic Press
                1053-8119
                1095-9572
                15 February 2012
                15 February 2012
                : 59-318
                : 4-12
                : 3139-3148
                Affiliations
                [a ]Medical Research Council, Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, 15 Chaucer Road, Cambridge, CB2 7EF, UK
                [b ]Department of Psychology, University of Potsdam, 14476 Potsdam OT Golm, Germany
                [c ]School of Psychology, The University of Dundee, Dundee, DD1 4HN, UK
                Author notes
                Article
                YNIMG8915
                10.1016/j.neuroimage.2011.11.037
                3315027
                22133748
                c0dad7de-d1d2-48eb-9d6a-294898b1850f
                © 2012 Elsevier Inc.

                This document may be redistributed and reused, subject to certain conditions.

                History
                : 7 September 2011
                : 8 November 2011
                : 10 November 2011
                Categories
                Article

                Neurosciences
                snarc effect,numerical cognition,finger counting habits,embodied cognition
                Neurosciences
                snarc effect, numerical cognition, finger counting habits, embodied cognition

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