| Literature DB >> 25538596 |
Barbara F M Marino1, Miriam Sirianni2, Riccardo Dalla Volta3, Fabio Magliocco3, Francesco Silipo3, Aldo Quattrone3, Giovanni Buccino2.
Abstract
It is well known that the observation of graspable objects recruits the same motor representations involved in their actual manipulation. Recent evidence suggests that the presentation of nouns referring to graspable objects may exert similar effects. So far, however, it is not clear to what extent the modulation of the motor system during object observation overlaps with that related to noun processing. To address this issue, 2 behavioral experiments were carried out using a go-no go paradigm. Healthy participants were presented with photos and nouns of graspable and non-graspable natural objects. Also scrambled images and pseudowords obtained from the original stimuli were used. At a go-signal onset (150 ms after stimulus presentation) participants had to press a key when the stimulus referred to a real object, using their right (Experiment 1) or left (Experiment 2) hand, and refrain from responding when a scrambled image or a pseudoword was presented. Slower responses were found for both photos and nouns of graspable objects as compared to non-graspable objects, independent of the responding hand. These findings suggest that processing seen graspable objects and written nouns referring to graspable objects similarly modulates the motor system.Entities:
Keywords: affordances; canonical neurons; embodiment; language processing; motor responses
Year: 2014 PMID: 25538596 PMCID: PMC4255516 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00968
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
List of the Italian nouns used in Experiment 1 and 2, their English translation, graspability of their referents, lexical frequency (number of occurrence per million in Google search engine—e.g., Marino et al., .
| Bulbo | Bulb | Yes | 2.17/0.13 | 5/2 |
| Pigna | Pinecone | Yes | 1.14/0.08 | 5/2 |
| Bocciolo | Bud | Yes | 0.42/0.39 | 8/3 |
| Corteccia | Bark | Yes | 0.58/2.82 | 9/3 |
| Foglia | Leaf | Yes | 3.32/6.79 | 6/2 |
| Fossile | Fossil | Yes | 1.63/0.01 | 7/3 |
| Cuoio | Leather | Yes | 3.52/13.0 | 5/3 |
| Granello | Grain | Yes | 0.33/0.26 | 8/3 |
| Neve | Snow | Yes | 34.4/35.8 | 4/2 |
| Paglia | Straw | Yes | 2.42/6.11 | 6/2 |
| Pepita | Nugget (gold) | Yes | 1.99/0.00 | 6/3 |
| Picciolo | Stalk | Yes | 0.61/0.22 | 8/3 |
| Pietra | Stone | Yes | 11.7/28.6 | 6/2 |
| Ramoscello | Sprig | Yes | 0.40/0.19 | 10/4 |
| Guscio | Shell (egg) | Yes | 1.09/1.89 | 6/2 |
| Sabbia | Sand | Yes | 5.01/17.3 | 6/2 |
| Scorza | Rind | Yes | 1.11/0.80 | 6/2 |
| Seme | Seed | Yes | 4.92/6.39 | 4/2 |
| Stelo | Stem | Yes | 1.03/1.66 | 5/2 |
| Sughero | Cork (bark) | Yes | 0.69/0.29 | 7/3 |
| Altopiano | Upland | No | 0.87/1.25 | 9/4 |
| Faglia | Fault (line) | No | 0.09/0.15 | 6/2 |
| Bosco | Wood (trees) | No | 14.9/17.8 | 5/2 |
| Caverna | Cavern | No | 3.76/1.71 | 7/3 |
| Collina | Hill | No | 4.86/10.0 | 7/3 |
| Cratere | Crater | No | 0.54/0.33 | 7/3 |
| Nuvola | Cloud | No | 3.55/3.60 | 6/3 |
| Frana | Landslide | No | 3.66/0.15 | 5/2 |
| Lago | Lake | No | 3.55/16.3 | 4/2 |
| Laguna | Lagoon | No | 2.42/2.35 | 6/3 |
| Masso | Boulder | No | 1.38/0.10 | 5/2 |
| Oasi | Oasis | No | 3.32/4.55 | 4/2 |
| Oceano | Ocean | No | 10.8/10.4 | 6/3 |
| Penisola | Peninsula | No | 2.48/7.15 | 8/4 |
| Foce | Mouth (river) | No | 1.58/0.92 | 4/2 |
| Cascata | Waterfall | No | 3.51/1.85 | 7/3 |
| Riva | Shore | No | 17.3/13.8 | 4/2 |
| Scoglio | Reef | No | 0.98/2.00 | 6/2 |
| Spiaggia | Beach | No | 12.6/34.1 | 8/3 |
| Valle | Valley | No | 9.02/10.4 | 5/2 |
List of the Italian nouns (and their English translation) of the objects depicted in the photographs used in Experiment 1 and 2, their graspability, lexical frequency, length and syllable number.
| Buccia | Peel (fruit) | Yes | 0.98/1.38 | 6/2 |
| Carbone | Coal (lump) | Yes | 13.5/8.69 | 7/3 |
| Conchiglia | Shell | Yes | 0.91/1.27 | 10/3 |
| Corallo | Coral | Yes | 2.12/0.76 | 7/3 |
| Diamante | Diamond | Yes | 2.70/1.71 | 8/3 |
| Fiore | Flower | Yes | 17.2/18.61 | 5/2 |
| Creta | Clay | Yes | 0.53/0.48 | 5/2 |
| Ghianda | Acorn | Yes | 0.48/0.04 | 7/2 |
| Osso | Bone | Yes | 5.46/5.41 | 4/2 |
| Perla | Pearl | Yes | 2.18/1.34 | 5/2 |
| Petalo | Petal | Yes | 0.53/0.02 | 6/3 |
| Baccello | Husk | Yes | 0.33/0.01 | 7/3 |
| Piuma | Feather | Yes | 1.55/1.38 | 5/2 |
| Radice | Root | Yes | 2.58/6.48 | 6/3 |
| Sasso | Pebble | Yes | 4.97/4.66 | 5/2 |
| Spiga | Ear (wheat) | Yes | 0.38/0.13 | 5/2 |
| Ghiacciolo | Icicle | Yes | 0.08/0.01 | 10/3 |
| Legname | Timber | Yes | 0.68/0.68 | 7/3 |
| Muschio | Moss | Yes | 0.57/0.91 | 7/3 |
| Capelli | Hair | Yes | 19.9/82.5 | 7/3 |
| Albero | Tree | No | 10.3/28.2 | 6/3 |
| Ruscello | Brook | No | 0.33/0.78 | 8/3 |
| Canyon | Canyon | No | 0.51/0.55 | 6/2 |
| Radura | Glade | No | 0.98/1.25 | 6/3 |
| Cometa | Comet | No | 1.29/0.11 | 6/3 |
| Deserto | Desert | No | 7.37/20.3 | 7/3 |
| Scogliera | Cliff | No | 0.87/1.46 | 9/3 |
| Foresta | Forest | No | 3.85/13.9 | 7/3 |
| Ghiacciaio | Glacier | No | 1.64/1.67 | 9/3 |
| Grotta | Cave | No | 2.80/6.80 | 6/2 |
| Iceberg | Iceberg | No | 1.25/1.03 | 7/2 |
| Stella | Star | No | 17.5/17.9 | 6/2 |
| Lava | Lava | No | 0.42/1.78 | 4/2 |
| Luna | Moon | No | 30.9/38.2 | 4/2 |
| Vulcano | Volcano | No | 4.84/3.08 | 7/3 |
| Crinale | Ridge | No | 0.98/0.93 | 7/3 |
| Palude | Marsh | No | 0.77/1.33 | 6/3 |
| Pianeta | Planet | No | 6.48/21.4 | 7/3 |
| Pineta | Pine forest | No | 2.71/0.20 | 6/3 |
| Prato | Meadow | No | 25.9/12.2 | 5/2 |
Figure 1Stimuli. Examples of stimuli presented in the two experiments. Upper row shows visual items while lower row shows verbal items. (A) Non-graspable object. (B) Graspable object. (C) Scrambled image. (D) A noun expressing a non-graspable object. (E) A noun expressing a graspable object. (F) Pseudoword.
Figure 2Experimental procedure. The timeline relative to the verbal stimuli presentation is depicted in the left part of the figure while the timeline relative to the visual stimuli presentation is depicted in the right part. Each trial started with a fixation cross. The appearance of the green frame represented the go-signal. Stimuli remained visible until motor response was given or 1500 ms had elapsed.
Figure 3Results. Median values of response times collected in Experiment 1 (A) and in Experiment 2 (B) as a function of Object Graspability (graspable objects vs. non-graspable objects), separately for each Stimulus Type (nouns: black columns vs. photos: white columns). Error bars represent the confidence interval at 95%. Significant differences between values are marked by asterisks.