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Action verbs drive motor activity in adolescents but not in children
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Converging perspectives on the relationship between language and action
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Abstract:
In this special issue on the functional links between language and action, researchers from allied disciplines in neuroscience, linguistics, computer science and psychology, using a wide array of approaches and methods with healthy and clinical populations highlight the salient features of that complex relationship. They offer contributions drawing on behavioral, cerebral imagery, surgery, direct as well as non-invasive electric stimulation of unusual corticospinal structures, modulation of force, computational models, learning and pedagogical perspectives, virtual reality and cultural techniques. The participants in these studies also cover a wide range and include, in addition to healthy adults, ad- olescents and children, people with stroke or with Parkinson’s disease, or with gliomas. The special contributions all converge on the important role played by the sensorimotor cortex (SMC) in language, in different modalities and with different languages. This convergence reveals the distributed and parallel nature of networks that are working with the SMC and with other brain areas classically related to language. It suggests new lines of thinking about linguistic activity; it also opens new perspectives in both fundamental and therapeutic endeavors with the objective of furthering our reflections and knowledge about the interaction between motor and linguistic activity (see also Argiris et al., 2020) One particular characteristic of the works included in this special issue is how afferences can modify the connectome. It has largely been assumed that neuronal connections are stable once formed. Some of the papers reveal how the primary somesthetic area, for example, is linked to linguistic activity and suggest that the connections may undergo rewiring — and language-dependent plasticity. Also, the papers in this special issue converge on the notion that the sensorimotor space enables a place of recurrent interactions with the environment in which the couplings and coordination that make up language occur. Interestingly, this conceptualization had already been proposed by Maturana and Varela (1992) when they argued that the only world we can have is the one we create together through the actions of our coexistence; they called it enactivism.
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Keyword:
Enactivism.Connectome.Cross-cultural. Sensorimotor recruitment
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URL: http://archipel.uqam.ca/14104/1/S0278262621000270
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Contributions of the Left and the Right Hemispheres on Language-Induced Grip Force Modulation of the Left Hand in Unimanual Tasks
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Assessing language-induced motor activity through Event Related Potentials and the Grip Force Sensor, an exploratory study
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Contributions of the Left- and the Right-Hemisphere on the Language-Induced Grip Force Modulation of the Left Hand in Unimanual Task
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Manual action verbs modulate the grip force of each hand in unimanual or symmetrical bimanual tasks
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Mise en évidence d’une transition sémantique par la modulation de la force de préhension bimanuelle par le langage lors du développement moteur de l’enfant
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A simple technique to study embodied language processes: the grip force sensor
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Supplementary Motor Area: A view from the left hand of the grip force modulation in unimanual and bimanual symmetric task.
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A Simple Technique to Study Embodied Language Processes: The Grip-Force Sensor
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Portable Device Validation to Study the Relation between Motor Activity and Language: Verify the Embodiment Theory through Grip Force Modulation
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A simple technique to study embodied language processes: the grip force sensor
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A simple technique to study embodied language processes: the grip force sensor
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In: ISSN: 1554-351X ; EISSN: 1554-3528 ; Behavior Research Methods ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01281675 ; Behavior Research Methods, Psychonomic Society, Inc, 2015, ⟨10.3758/s13428-015-0696-7⟩ (2015)
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Action relevance in linguistic context drives word-induced motor activity.
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In: ISSN: 1662-5161 ; Frontiers in Human Neuroscience ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01067818 ; Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, Frontiers, 2014, 8, pp.163. ⟨10.3389/fnhum.2014.00163⟩ (2014)
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Action relevance in linguistic context drives word-induced motor activity
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Word-Induced Postural Changes Reflect a Tight Interaction Between Motor and Lexico-Semantic Representations
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Grip force reveals the context sensitivity of language-induced motor activity during "action words" processing: evidence from sentential negation.
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In: ISSN: 1932-6203 ; EISSN: 1932-6203 ; PLoS ONE ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00875165 ; PLoS ONE, Public Library of Science, 2012, 7 (12), pp.e50287. ⟨10.1371/journal.pone.0050287⟩ (2012)
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Contextual effects on motor activation during "action word" processing: Grip force study of volition denoting sentences
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In: The Neurobiology of Language Conference ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00932603 ; The Neurobiology of Language Conference, Oct 2012, San Sebastian, Spain (2012)
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Grip Force Reveals the Context Sensitivity of Language-Induced Motor Activity during “Action Words
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