Detailed Information on Publication Record
2021
Imitation or Polarity Correspondence? Behavioural and Neurophysiological Evidence for the Confounding Influence of Orthogonal Spatial Compatibility on Measures of Automatic Imitation
CZEKÓOVÁ, Kristína, Daniel Joel SHAW, Martin LAMOŠ, Beáta HAVLICE ŠPILÁKOVÁ, Miguel SALAZAR ADAMS et. al.Basic information
Original name
Imitation or Polarity Correspondence? Behavioural and Neurophysiological Evidence for the Confounding Influence of Orthogonal Spatial Compatibility on Measures of Automatic Imitation
Authors
CZEKÓOVÁ, Kristína (703 Slovakia, belonging to the institution), Daniel Joel SHAW (826 United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, guarantor, belonging to the institution), Martin LAMOŠ (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution), Beáta HAVLICE ŠPILÁKOVÁ (703 Slovakia, belonging to the institution), Miguel SALAZAR ADAMS (484 Mexico, belonging to the institution) and Milan BRÁZDIL (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution)
Edition
COGNITIVE AFFECTIVE & BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE, NEW YORK, SPRINGER, 2021, 1530-7026
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Článek v odborném periodiku
Field of Study
30103 Neurosciences
Country of publisher
United States of America
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
References:
Impact factor
Impact factor: 3.526
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14740/21:00118919
Organization unit
Central European Institute of Technology
UT WoS
000607053700001
Keywords in English
Automatic imitation; Orthogonal spatial compatibility; Semantic control; Polarity correspondence
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 9/10/2024 14:20, Ing. Jana Kuchtová
Abstract
V originále
During social interactions, humans tend to imitate one another involuntarily. To investigate the neurocognitive mechanisms driving this tendency, researchers often employ stimulus-response compatibility (SRC) tasks to assess the influence that action observation has on action execution. This is referred to as automatic imitation (AI). The stimuli used frequently in SRC procedures to elicit AI often confound action-related with other nonsocial influences on behaviour; however, in response to the rotated hand-action stimuli employed increasingly, AI partly reflects unspecific up-right/down-left biases in stimulus-response mapping. Despite an emerging awareness of this confounding orthogonal spatial-compatibility effect, psychological and neuroscientific research into social behaviour continues to employ these stimuli to investigate AI. To increase recognition of this methodological issue, the present study measured the systematic influence of orthogonal spatial effects on behavioural and neurophysiological measures of AI acquired with rotated hand-action stimuli in SRC tasks. In Experiment 1, behavioural data from a large sample revealed that complex orthogonal spatial effects exert an influence on AI over and above any topographical similarity between observed and executed actions. Experiment 2 reproduced this finding in a more systematic, within-subject design, and high-density electroencephalography revealed that electrocortical expressions of AI elicited also are modulated by orthogonal spatial compatibility. Finally, source localisations identified a collection of cortical areas sensitive to this spatial confound, including nodes of the multiple-demand and semantic-control networks. These results indicate that AI measured on SRC procedures with the rotated hand stimuli used commonly might reflect neurocognitive mechanisms associated with spatial associations rather than imitative tendencies.
Links
GA15-16738S, research and development project |
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LQ1601, research and development project |
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90129, large research infrastructures |
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