2017
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.23823
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Visuomotor effects of body part movements presented in the first‐person perspective on imitative behavior

Abstract: Imitative stimuli presented from a first-person perspective (FPP) produce stronger visuomotor effects than those presented from a third-person perspective (TPP) due to the relatively greater response of the mirror neuron system (MNS) to FPP stimuli. Some previous studies utilizing TPP stimuli have reported no differences in MNS activity between moving and static bodies' stimuli. However, few studies have compared visuomotor effects of such stimuli when presented in the FPP. To clarify this issue, we measured c… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 70 publications
(95 reference statements)
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“…It can be hypothesized that similar activation takes place in humans and that the mirroring function plays a role in the learning and critical evaluation of movement skills. This provides further empirical evidence for a non-dualist approach to understanding skill execution ( Birch, 2017 ) and may have interesting practical implications, among them as a rationale for imitation as a main didactic approach in skill learning ( Watanabe et al, 2017 ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 83%
“…It can be hypothesized that similar activation takes place in humans and that the mirroring function plays a role in the learning and critical evaluation of movement skills. This provides further empirical evidence for a non-dualist approach to understanding skill execution ( Birch, 2017 ) and may have interesting practical implications, among them as a rationale for imitation as a main didactic approach in skill learning ( Watanabe et al, 2017 ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 83%
“…In the present study, all of the stimuli were presented from the third person perspective (3PP), as PTs generally observe and assess their patients from the 3PP. Additionally, in many previous studies investigating imitative behavior or action observation, the 3PP has been considered to be another person's viewpoint (as if the observers are facing the others) (Bortoletto et al, 2013; Jackson et al, 2006; Kelly and Wheaton, 2013; Vistoli et al, 2016; Watanabe et al, 2017). Based on the fact that PTs observe the patients as “other”, we considered that the 3PP was more appropriate for our study compared to the first person perspective, in which the observers observe movement from their own perspective.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Imitation ability is supported by a direct visuospatial route in which the visual input resulted in motor output (Vivanti, 2013 ). Indeed, when a person observes other people's movements, the somatosensory area of the brain that controls motor actions is active (Hanawa et al, 2016 ; Watanabe et al, 2017 ). Imitation ability could be assessed via imitation of prerecorded human whole-body complex motions in real time.…”
Section: Imitation As An Alternative To Assess Proprioceptionmentioning
confidence: 99%