Publication | Closed Access
Mirror neurons and motor intentionality.
128
Citations
33
References
2008
Year
Own Motor RepresentationMetacognitionCognitionMotor ControlAttentionPsychologySocial SciencesSocial NeuroscienceIntentional UnderstandingMotor NeuroscienceCognitive NeuroscienceMotor IntentionalityMotor BehaviorHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesMirror NeuronsSelf-awarenessEmbodied CognitionMotor CortexSocial CognitionCollective IntentionalitySensorimotor TransformationMotor SystemNeuroscienceIntentional ComponentsPhilosophy Of Mind
Our social life rests to a large extent on our ability to understand the intentions of others. What are the bases of this ability? A very influential view is that we understand the intentions of others because we are able to represent them as having mental states. Without this meta-representational (mind-reading) ability their behavior would be meaningless to us. Over the past few years this view has been challenged by neurophysiological findings and, in particular, by the discovery of mirror neurons. The functional properties of these neurons indicate that intentional understanding is based primarily on a mechanism that directly matches the sensory representation of the observed actions with one's own motor representation of those same actions. These findings reveal how deeply motor and intentional components of action are intertwined, suggesting that both can be fully comprehended only starting from a motor approach to intentionality.
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