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1
Visual and motor components of action anticipation in basketball and soccer
In: Moving bodies in interaction - interacting bodies in motion (Amsterdam, 2017), p. 93-112
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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2
Neuroanatomical substrates of action perception and understanding: an anatomic likelihood estimation meta-analysis of lesion-symptom mapping studies in brain injured patients
Urgesi, Cosimo; Candidi, Matteo; Avenanti, Alessio. - : Frontiers Media S.A., 2014
BASE
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3
Cognitive and Anatomical Underpinnings of the Conceptual Knowledge for Common Objects and Familiar People: A Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Study
Campanella, Fabio; Fabbro, Franco; Urgesi, Cosimo. - : Public Library of Science, 2013
Abstract: Several studies have addressed the issue of how knowledge of common objects is organized in the brain, whereas the cognitive and anatomical underpinnings of familiar people knowledge have been less explored. Here we applied repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) over the left and right temporal poles before asking healthy individuals to perform a speeded word-to-picture matching task using familiar people and common objects as stimuli. We manipulated two widely used semantic variables, namely the semantic distance and the familiarity of stimuli, to assess whether the semantic organization of familiar people knowledge is similar to that of common objects. For both objects and faces we reliably found semantic distance and familiarity effects, with less accurate and slower responses for stimulus pairs that were more closely related and less familiar. However, the effects of semantic variables differed across categories, with semantic distance effects larger for objects and familiarity effects larger for faces, suggesting that objects and faces might share a partially comparable organization of their semantic representations. The application of rTMS to the left temporal pole modulated, for both categories, semantic distance, but not familiarity effects, revealing that accessing object and face concepts might rely on overlapping processes within left anterior temporal regions. Crucially, rTMS of the left temporal pole affected only the recognition of pairs of stimuli that could be discriminated at specific levels of categorization (e.g., two kitchen tools or two famous persons), with no effect for discriminations at either superordinate or individual levels. Conversely, rTMS of the right temporal pole induced an overall slowing of reaction times that positively correlated with the visual similarity of the stimuli, suggesting a more perceptual rather than semantic role of the right anterior temporal regions. Results are discussed in the light of current models of face and object semantic representations in the brain.
Keyword: Research Article
URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23704999
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3660352
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0064596
BASE
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4
Clinical neurolinguistics of bilingualism
In: Language processing in the brain (Malden, MA, 2012), p. 738-759
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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5
Virtual lesion of ventral premotor cortex impairs visual perception of biomechanically possible but not impossible actions
In: The mirror neuron system (Hove, 2009), p. 401-409
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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6
Neuropsychology of second language acquisition
In: The new handbook of second language acquisition. - Bingley [u.a.] : Emerald (2009), 357-376
BLLDB
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