Embodied cognition comes of age: A processing advantage for action words is modulated by aging and the task.
Alex Miklashevsky,
Jana Reifegerste,
Adolfo M. García
et al.
Abstract:Processing action words (e.g., fork, throw) engages neurocognitive motor representations, consistent with embodied cognition principles. Despite age-related neurocognitive changes that could affect action words, and a rapidly aging population, the impact of healthy aging on action-word processing is poorly understood. Previous research suggests that in lexical tasks demanding semantic access, such as picture naming, higher motor-relatedness can enhance performance (e.g., fork vs. pier)—particularly in older ad… Show more
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