Chatterjee Anjan
University of Pennsylvania.
Lang Cogn. 2010 May;2(1):79-116. doi: 10.1515/LANGCOG.2010.004.
The idea that concepts are embodied by our motor and sensory systems is popular in current theorizing about cognition. Embodied cognition accounts come in different versions and are often contrasted with a purely symbolic amodal view of cognition. Simulation, or the hypothesis that concepts simulate the sensory and motor experience of real world encounters with instances of those concepts, has been prominent in psychology and cognitive neuroscience. Here, with a focus on spatial thought and language, I review some of the evidence cited in support of simulation versions of embodied cognition accounts. While these data are extremely interesting and many of the experiments are elegant, knowing how to best interpret the results is often far from clear. I point out that a quick acceptance of embodied accounts runs the danger of ignoring alternate hypotheses and not scrutinizing neuroscience data critically. I also review recent work from my lab that raises questions about the nature of sensory motor grounding in spatial thought and language. In my view, the question of whether or not cognition is grounded is more fruitfully replaced by questions about gradations in this grounding. A focus on disembodying cognition, or on graded grounding, opens the way to think about how humans abstract. Within neuroscience, I propose that three functional anatomic axes help frame questions about the graded nature of grounded cognition. First, are questions of laterality differences. Do association cortices in both hemispheres instantiate the same kind of sensory or motor information? Second, are questions about ventral dorsal axes. Do neuronal ensembles along this axis shift from conceptual representations of objects to the relationships between objects? Third, are questions about gradients centripetally from sensory and motor cortices towards and within perisylvian cortices. How does sensory and perceptual information become more language-like and then get transformed into language proper?
概念由我们的运动和感觉系统所体现,这一观点在当前关于认知的理论中很流行。具身认知理论有不同版本,常与纯粹符号性的非模态认知观点形成对比。模拟,即概念模拟与这些概念实例的现实世界相遇的感觉和运动体验这一假设,在心理学和认知神经科学中一直很突出。在此,我聚焦于空间思维和语言,回顾一些为支持具身认知理论的模拟版本而引用的证据。虽然这些数据极其有趣,且许多实验设计精巧,但如何最好地解释结果往往远非清晰明了。我指出,迅速接受具身认知理论存在忽视其他假设且不严格审视神经科学数据的风险。我还回顾了我实验室最近的工作,这些工作对空间思维和语言中感觉运动基础的本质提出了疑问。在我看来,认知是否有基础的问题,更有成效地被关于这种基础的程度问题所取代。关注认知的非具身化或程度性基础,为思考人类如何进行抽象开辟了道路。在神经科学领域,我提出三个功能解剖轴有助于构建关于具身认知程度本质的问题。第一,是关于左右差异的问题。两个半球的联合皮层是否实例化相同类型的感觉或运动信息?第二,是关于腹侧 - 背侧轴的问题。沿着这个轴的神经元集合是否从物体的概念表征转变为物体之间的关系?第三,是关于从感觉和运动皮层向外侧裂周围皮层及在其中向心的梯度问题。感觉和知觉信息如何变得更像语言,然后转化为恰当的语言?