The present research examines the effects of body-object interaction (BOI) on eye gaze behaviour in a reading task. BOI measures perceptions of the ease with which a human body can physically interact with a word's referent. A set of high BOI words (e.g. cat) and a set of low BOI words (e.g. sun) were s elected, matched on imageability and concreteness (as well as other lexical and semantic variables). Facilitatory BOI effects were observed: gaze durations and total fixation durations were shorter for high BOI words, and participants made fewer regressions to high BOI words. The results provide evidence of a BOI effect on non-manual responses and in a situation that taps normal reading processes. We discuss how the results (a) suggest that stored motor information (as measured by BOI ratings) is relevant to lexical semantics, and ( b) are consistent with an embodied view of cognition (Wilson 2002).
The medial frontal cortex (MFC) is involved in the temporal organization of behaviour. It receives timing information from the master circadian clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), and exhibits daily oscillations in gene expression itself. In this study, we evaluate various properties of circadian rhythms of locomotor activity following neonatal or adult MFC aspiration lesions. Mice with neonatal lesions were more active during the day than mice with adult lesions and less active during the early night than both mice with adult lesions and control mice. Compared to controls, mice with neonatal lesions exhibited smaller phase delays to an early-night light pulse and marginally larger phase advances to a late-night light pulse. Mice with adult lesions did not differ from controls on either measure. The results suggest that the timing of behaviour is determined by an interaction between the MFC and the SCN and that injury early in life has a significant effect on the ability of animals to organize such behaviours.
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