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      Congruent embodied representations for visually presented actions and linguistic phrases describing actions.

      Current Biology
      Adult, Brain Mapping, Cognition, physiology, Female, Humans, Linguistics, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Motor Cortex, anatomy & histology, Photic Stimulation, Reading, Visual Perception

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          Abstract

          The thesis of embodied semantics holds that conceptual representations accessed during linguistic processing are, in part, equivalent to the sensory-motor representations required for the enactment of the concepts described . Here, using fMRI, we tested the hypothesis that areas in human premotor cortex that respond both to the execution and observation of actions-mirror neuron areas -are key neural structures in these processes. Participants observed actions and read phrases relating to foot, hand, or mouth actions. In the premotor cortex of the left hemisphere, a clear congruence was found between effector-specific activations of visually presented actions and of actions described by literal phrases. These results suggest a key role of mirror neuron areas in the re-enactment of sensory-motor representations during conceptual processing of actions invoked by linguistic stimuli.

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