4.4 Article

Mirror system activity for action and language is embedded in the integration of dorsal and ventral pathways

Journal

BRAIN AND LANGUAGE
Volume 112, Issue 1, Pages 12-24

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.bandl.2009.10.001

Keywords

Mirror neurons; Embodied experience; Neurolinguistics; Ventral pathway; Dorsal pathway; Perceptual schemas; Motor schemas; Mental simulation theory; Affordances; Construction Grammar; SemRep; Template Construction Grammar; Augmented Competitive Queuing; Action sequencing; Visual scene description

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We develop the view that the involvement of mirror neurons in embodied experience grounds brain structures that underlie language, but that many other brain regions are involved. We stress the cooperation between the dorsal and ventral streams in praxis and language. Both have perceptual and motor schemas but the perceptual schemas in the dorsal path are affordances linked to specific motor schemas for detailed motor control, whereas the ventral path supports planning and decision making. This frames the hypothesis that the mirror system for words evolved from the mirror system for actions to support words-as-phonological-actions, with semantics provided by the linkage to neural systems supporting perceptual and motor schemas. We stress the importance of computational models which can be linked to the parametric analysis of data and conceptual analysis of these models to support new patterns of understanding of the data. In the domain of praxis, we assess the FARS model of the canonical system for grasping, the MINIS models for the mirror system for grasping, and the Augmented Competitive Queuing model that extends the control of action to the opportunistic scheduling of action sequences and also offers a new hypothesis on the role of mirror neurons in self action. Turning to language, we use Construction Grammar as our linguistic framework to get beyond single words to phrases and sentences, and initiate analysis of what brain functions must complement mirror systems to support this functionality. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc All rights reserved..

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