| Literature DB >> 33779507 |
Ghislain Saunier1,2,3, Ana Paula Fontana4, José M De Oliveira5, Marco Oliveira Py6, Thierry Pozzo7,8, Claudia D Vargas5,6.
Abstract
The present study aims at the cerebellum's role in prediction mechanisms triggered by action observation. Five cerebellar patients and six age-paired control subjects were asked to estimate the occluded end point position of the shoulder's trajectories in Sit-to-Stand (STS) or Back-to-Sit (BTS) conditions, following or not biological rules. Contrarily to the control group, the prediction accuracy of the end point position in cerebellar patients did not depend on biological rules. Interestingly, both groups presented similar results when estimating the vanishing position of the target. Taken together, these results suggest that cerebellar damage affectsthe capacity of predicting upcoming actions by observation.Entities:
Keywords: Motion inference; cerebellar damage; internal models of action; kinematic rules; motor resonance
Year: 2021 PMID: 33779507 DOI: 10.1080/13554794.2021.1905853
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurocase ISSN: 1355-4794 Impact factor: 0.881