4.4 Article

Evidence for the representation of movement kinematics in the discharge of F5 mirror neurons during the observation of transitive and intransitive actions

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 118, Issue 6, Pages 3215-3229

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00816.2016

Keywords

action observation; intransitive actions; mirror neurons; movement kinematics

Funding

  1. METR [action ARISTEIA II project, Operational Programme Education and Lifelong Learning of the General Secretariat for Research and Technology, Ministry of Education, Greece (GSRT)] [3968]
  2. European Social Fund
  3. Greek State
  4. GSRT 14TUR OBSERVENEMO (action bilateral S & T Cooperation, Operational Programme Competitiveness & Entrepreneurship - EPAN II) of GSRT
  5. European Regional Development Fund
  6. University of Crete, Special Account for Research [3704, 3767]
  7. John S. Latsis Public Benefit Foundation
  8. project Advanced Research Activities in Biomedical and Agroalimentary Technologies - Operational Programme Competitiveness, Entrepreneurship, and Innovation (NSRF) [MIS 5002469]
  9. European Union (European Regional Development Fund)

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Mirror neurons (MirNs) are sensorimotor neurons that fire both when an animal performs a goal-directed action and when the same animal observes another agent performing the same or a similar transitive action. It has been claimed that the observation of intransitive actions does not activate MirNs in a monkey's brain. Prompted by recent evidence indicating that the discharge of MirNs is modulated also by non-object-directed actions, we investigated thoroughly the efficacy of intransitive actions to trigger MirNs' discharge. Using representational similarity analysis, we also studied whether the elements constituting the visual scene presented to the monkey during the observation of actions (both transitive and intransitive) are represented in the discharge of MirNs. For this purpose, the moving hand was modeled by its kinematics and the object by features of its geometry. We found that MirNs respond to the observation of both transitive and intransitive actions and that the discharge differences evoked by the observation of object-and non-object-directed actions are correlated more with the kinematic differences of these actions than with the differences of the objects' features. These findings support the view that observed action kinematics contribute to action mirroring. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Mirror neurons in the monkey brain are thought to respond exclusively to the observation of object-directed actions. Here, we show that mirror neurons also respond to the observation of intransitive actions and that the kinematics of the observed movements are represented in their discharge. This finding supports the view that mirror neurons provide also a kinematics-based representation of actions.

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