Cortical Motor Organization, Mirror Neurons, and Embodied Language: An Evolutionary Perspective

The recent conceptual achievement that the cortical motor system plays a crucial role not only in motor control but also in higher cognitive functions has given a new perspective also on the involvement of motor cortex in language perception and production. In particular, there is evidence that the...

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Main Authors: Leonardo Fogassi, Pier Francesco Ferrari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Biolinguistics 2012-11-01
Series:Biolinguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/291
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spelling doaj-50f26903687443ecb7f0a35f4ee755f82020-11-24T20:53:02ZengBiolinguisticsBiolinguistics1450-34172012-11-0163-4308337182Cortical Motor Organization, Mirror Neurons, and Embodied Language: An Evolutionary PerspectiveLeonardo FogassiPier Francesco FerrariThe recent conceptual achievement that the cortical motor system plays a crucial role not only in motor control but also in higher cognitive functions has given a new perspective also on the involvement of motor cortex in language perception and production. In particular, there is evidence that the matching mechanism based on mirror neurons can be involved in both pho-nological recognition and retrieval of meaning, especially for action word categories, thus suggesting a contribution of an action–perception mechanism to the automatic comprehension of semantics. Furthermore, a compari-son of the anatomo-functional properties of the frontal motor cortex among different primates and their communicative modalities indicates that the combination of the voluntary control of the gestural communication systems and of the vocal apparatus has been the critical factor in the transition from a gestural-based communication into a predominantly speech-based system. Finally, considering that the monkey and human premotor-parietal motor system, plus the prefrontal cortex, are involved in the sequential motor organization of actions and in the hierarchical combination of motor elements, we propose that elements of such motor organization have been exploited in other domains, including some aspects of the syntactic structure of language.http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/291actionBroca’s areagesturesmatching mechanismmonkey
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leonardo Fogassi
Pier Francesco Ferrari
spellingShingle Leonardo Fogassi
Pier Francesco Ferrari
Cortical Motor Organization, Mirror Neurons, and Embodied Language: An Evolutionary Perspective
Biolinguistics
action
Broca’s area
gestures
matching mechanism
monkey
author_facet Leonardo Fogassi
Pier Francesco Ferrari
author_sort Leonardo Fogassi
title Cortical Motor Organization, Mirror Neurons, and Embodied Language: An Evolutionary Perspective
title_short Cortical Motor Organization, Mirror Neurons, and Embodied Language: An Evolutionary Perspective
title_full Cortical Motor Organization, Mirror Neurons, and Embodied Language: An Evolutionary Perspective
title_fullStr Cortical Motor Organization, Mirror Neurons, and Embodied Language: An Evolutionary Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Cortical Motor Organization, Mirror Neurons, and Embodied Language: An Evolutionary Perspective
title_sort cortical motor organization, mirror neurons, and embodied language: an evolutionary perspective
publisher Biolinguistics
series Biolinguistics
issn 1450-3417
publishDate 2012-11-01
description The recent conceptual achievement that the cortical motor system plays a crucial role not only in motor control but also in higher cognitive functions has given a new perspective also on the involvement of motor cortex in language perception and production. In particular, there is evidence that the matching mechanism based on mirror neurons can be involved in both pho-nological recognition and retrieval of meaning, especially for action word categories, thus suggesting a contribution of an action–perception mechanism to the automatic comprehension of semantics. Furthermore, a compari-son of the anatomo-functional properties of the frontal motor cortex among different primates and their communicative modalities indicates that the combination of the voluntary control of the gestural communication systems and of the vocal apparatus has been the critical factor in the transition from a gestural-based communication into a predominantly speech-based system. Finally, considering that the monkey and human premotor-parietal motor system, plus the prefrontal cortex, are involved in the sequential motor organization of actions and in the hierarchical combination of motor elements, we propose that elements of such motor organization have been exploited in other domains, including some aspects of the syntactic structure of language.
topic action
Broca’s area
gestures
matching mechanism
monkey
url http://biolinguistics.eu/index.php/biolinguistics/article/view/291
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AT pierfrancescoferrari corticalmotororganizationmirrorneuronsandembodiedlanguageanevolutionaryperspective
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