Negri Gioia A L, Rumiati Raffaella I, Zadini Antonietta, Ukmar Maja, Mahon Bradford Z, Caramazza Alfonso
Cognitive Neuroscience Sector, Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati, Trieste, Italy.
Cogn Neuropsychol. 2007 Dec;24(8):795-816. doi: 10.1080/02643290701707412.
An important issue in contemporary cognitive neuroscience concerns the role of motor production processes in perceptual and conceptual analysis. To address this issue, we studied the performance of a large group of unilateral stroke patients across a range of tasks using the same set of common manipulable objects. All patients (n = 37) were tested for their ability to demonstrate the use of the objects, recognize the objects, recognize the corresponding object-associated pantomimes, and imitate those same pantomimes. At the group level we observed reliable correlations between object use and pantomime recognition, object use and object recognition, and pantomime imitation and pantomime recognition. At the single-case level, we document that the ability to recognize actions and objects dissociates from the ability to use those same objects. These data are problematic for the hypothesis that motor processes are constitutively involved in the recognition of actions and objects and frame new questions about the inferences that are merited by recent findings in cognitive neuroscience.
当代认知神经科学中的一个重要问题涉及运动产生过程在感知和概念分析中的作用。为了解决这个问题,我们使用同一组常见的可操纵物体,对一大群单侧中风患者在一系列任务中的表现进行了研究。所有患者(n = 37)都接受了测试,以评估他们展示物体使用方法、识别物体、识别与物体相关的相应手势,以及模仿这些手势的能力。在组水平上,我们观察到物体使用与手势识别、物体使用与物体识别,以及手势模仿与手势识别之间存在可靠的相关性。在单病例水平上,我们记录到识别动作和物体的能力与使用这些相同物体的能力是分离的。这些数据对于运动过程在动作和物体识别中具有构成性作用这一假设提出了质疑,并为认知神经科学近期研究结果所支持的推论提出了新问题。