The Neurobiology of Imagination: Possible Role of Interaction-Dominant Dynamics and Default Mode Network
This work aims at presenting some hypotheses about the potential neurobiological substrate of imagery and imagination. For the present purposes, we will define imagery as the production of mental images associated with previous percepts, and imagination as the faculty of forming mental images of a n...
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doaj-0db1cb5470dd4f8eb19ae60bd053ee9c2020-11-25T00:21:37ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782013-05-01410.3389/fpsyg.2013.0029643641The Neurobiology of Imagination: Possible Role of Interaction-Dominant Dynamics and Default Mode NetworkLuigi Francesco Agnati0Diego eGuidolin1Leontino eBattistin2Giuseppe ePagnoni3Kjell eFuxe4IRCSS San CamilloUniversity of PadovaIRCSS San CamilloUniversity of ModenaKarolinska InstitutetThis work aims at presenting some hypotheses about the potential neurobiological substrate of imagery and imagination. For the present purposes, we will define imagery as the production of mental images associated with previous percepts, and imagination as the faculty of forming mental images of a novel character relating to something that has never been actually experienced by the subject but at a great extent emerges from his inner world.The two processes appear intimately related and imagery can arguably be considered as one of the main components of imagination. In this proposal, we argue that exaptation and redeployment, two basic concepts capturing important aspects of the evolution of biological structures and functions (Anderson 2007), could also be useful in explaining imagery and imagination. As far as imagery is concerned it is proposed that neural structures originally implicated in performing certain functions, e.g. motor actions, can be reused for the imagery of the virtual execution of that function. As far as imagination is concerned we speculate that it can be the result of a tinkering that combines and modifies stored perceptual information and concepts leading to the creation of novel mental objects that are shaped by the subject peculiar inner world. Hence it is related to his self-awareness. The neurobiological substrate of the tinkering process could be found in a hierarchical model of the brain characterized by a multiplicity of functional modules (FMs) that can be assembled according to different spatial and temporal scales. Thus, it is surmised that a possible mechanism for the emergence of imagination could be represented by modulatory mechanisms controlling the perviousness of modifiers along the communication channels within and between FMs leading to their dynamically reassembling into novel configurations.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00296/fullImaginationMirror Neuronsimageryvolume transmissionExaptationFunctional Module |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Luigi Francesco Agnati Diego eGuidolin Leontino eBattistin Giuseppe ePagnoni Kjell eFuxe |
spellingShingle |
Luigi Francesco Agnati Diego eGuidolin Leontino eBattistin Giuseppe ePagnoni Kjell eFuxe The Neurobiology of Imagination: Possible Role of Interaction-Dominant Dynamics and Default Mode Network Frontiers in Psychology Imagination Mirror Neurons imagery volume transmission Exaptation Functional Module |
author_facet |
Luigi Francesco Agnati Diego eGuidolin Leontino eBattistin Giuseppe ePagnoni Kjell eFuxe |
author_sort |
Luigi Francesco Agnati |
title |
The Neurobiology of Imagination: Possible Role of Interaction-Dominant Dynamics and Default Mode Network |
title_short |
The Neurobiology of Imagination: Possible Role of Interaction-Dominant Dynamics and Default Mode Network |
title_full |
The Neurobiology of Imagination: Possible Role of Interaction-Dominant Dynamics and Default Mode Network |
title_fullStr |
The Neurobiology of Imagination: Possible Role of Interaction-Dominant Dynamics and Default Mode Network |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Neurobiology of Imagination: Possible Role of Interaction-Dominant Dynamics and Default Mode Network |
title_sort |
neurobiology of imagination: possible role of interaction-dominant dynamics and default mode network |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Psychology |
issn |
1664-1078 |
publishDate |
2013-05-01 |
description |
This work aims at presenting some hypotheses about the potential neurobiological substrate of imagery and imagination. For the present purposes, we will define imagery as the production of mental images associated with previous percepts, and imagination as the faculty of forming mental images of a novel character relating to something that has never been actually experienced by the subject but at a great extent emerges from his inner world.The two processes appear intimately related and imagery can arguably be considered as one of the main components of imagination. In this proposal, we argue that exaptation and redeployment, two basic concepts capturing important aspects of the evolution of biological structures and functions (Anderson 2007), could also be useful in explaining imagery and imagination. As far as imagery is concerned it is proposed that neural structures originally implicated in performing certain functions, e.g. motor actions, can be reused for the imagery of the virtual execution of that function. As far as imagination is concerned we speculate that it can be the result of a tinkering that combines and modifies stored perceptual information and concepts leading to the creation of novel mental objects that are shaped by the subject peculiar inner world. Hence it is related to his self-awareness. The neurobiological substrate of the tinkering process could be found in a hierarchical model of the brain characterized by a multiplicity of functional modules (FMs) that can be assembled according to different spatial and temporal scales. Thus, it is surmised that a possible mechanism for the emergence of imagination could be represented by modulatory mechanisms controlling the perviousness of modifiers along the communication channels within and between FMs leading to their dynamically reassembling into novel configurations. |
topic |
Imagination Mirror Neurons imagery volume transmission Exaptation Functional Module |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00296/full |
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