Publications


Neural systems for preparatory control of imitation.

Cross KA; Iacoboni M;
Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences. 2014-Dec; 369(20130176):1644
 
Humans have an automatic tendency to imitate others. Previous studies on how we control these tendencies have focused on reactive mechanisms, where inhibition of imitation is implemented after seeing an action. This work suggests that reactive control of imitation draws on at least partially specialized mechanisms. Here, we examine preparatory imitation control, where advance information allows control processes to be employed before an action is observed. Drawing on dual route models from the spatial compatibility literature, we compare control processes using biological and non-biological stimuli to determine whether preparatory imitation control recruits specialized neural systems that are similar to those observed in reactive imitation control. Results indicate that preparatory control involves anterior prefrontal, dorsolateral prefrontal, posterior parietal and early visual cortices regardless of whether automatic responses are evoked by biological (imitative) or non-biological stimuli. These results indicate both that preparatory control of imitation uses general mechanisms, and that preparatory control of imitation draws on different neural systems from reactive imitation control. Based on the regions involved, we hypothesize that preparatory control is implemented through top-down attentional biasing of visual processing.
 
PMID: 24778373    doi: 10.1098/rstb.2013.0176
 

BMAP Authors

Marco Iacoboni
Marco Iacoboni M.D. Ph.D.
310-206-3992
Marco Iacoboni
Marco Iacoboni M.D. Ph.D.
310-206-3992