Current literature supports the notion that the recognition of objects, when visually pre-sented, is sub-served by neural structures different from those responsible for the semantic processing of their nouns. However, embodiment foresees that processing observed objects and their verbal labels should share similar neural mechanisms. In a combined behavioral and MEG study, we com-pared the modulation of motor responses and cortical rhythms during the processing of graspable natural objects and tools, either verbally or pictorially presented. Our findings demonstrate that conveying meaning to an observed object or processing its noun similarly modulates both motor responses and cortical rhythms; being natural graspable objects and tools differently represented in the brain, they affect in a different manner both behavioral and MEG findings, independent of presentation modality. These results provide experimental evidence that neural substrates responsible for conveying meaning to objects overlap with those where the object is represented, thus supporting an embodied view of semantic processing.

The Semantics of Natural Objects and Tools in the Brain: A Combined Behavioral and MEG Study / Visani, E.; Sebastiano, D. R.; Duran, D.; Garofalo, G.; Magliocco, F.; Silipo, F.; Buccino, G.. - In: BRAIN SCIENCES. - ISSN 2076-3425. - 12:1(2022), p. 97. [10.3390/brainsci12010097]

The Semantics of Natural Objects and Tools in the Brain: A Combined Behavioral and MEG Study

Buccino G.
2022-01-01

Abstract

Current literature supports the notion that the recognition of objects, when visually pre-sented, is sub-served by neural structures different from those responsible for the semantic processing of their nouns. However, embodiment foresees that processing observed objects and their verbal labels should share similar neural mechanisms. In a combined behavioral and MEG study, we com-pared the modulation of motor responses and cortical rhythms during the processing of graspable natural objects and tools, either verbally or pictorially presented. Our findings demonstrate that conveying meaning to an observed object or processing its noun similarly modulates both motor responses and cortical rhythms; being natural graspable objects and tools differently represented in the brain, they affect in a different manner both behavioral and MEG findings, independent of presentation modality. These results provide experimental evidence that neural substrates responsible for conveying meaning to objects overlap with those where the object is represented, thus supporting an embodied view of semantic processing.
2022
Behavioral responses
Beta rhythm
Embodiment
MEG
Object representations
Semantics
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11768/125523
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