The mental simulation of state/psychological verbs in the adolescent brain: An fMRI study

•We used fMRI to address state/psychological and action simulation.•16 Adolescent participants were studied.•The right SMG and the right insula were activated by imagery of state/psychological concepts.•The right intraparietal sulcus was deactivated.•In older subjects the SMG was deactivated. This f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain and cognition 2018-06, Vol.123, p.34-46
Hauptverfasser: Tomasino, Barbara, Nobile, Maria, Re, Marta, Bellina, Monica, Garzitto, Marco, Arrigoni, Filippo, Molteni, Massimo, Fabbro, Franco, Brambilla, Paolo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We used fMRI to address state/psychological and action simulation.•16 Adolescent participants were studied.•The right SMG and the right insula were activated by imagery of state/psychological concepts.•The right intraparietal sulcus was deactivated.•In older subjects the SMG was deactivated. This fMRI study investigated mental simulation of state/psychological and action verbs during adolescence. Sixteen healthy subjects silently read verbs describing a motor scene or not (STIMULUS: motor, state/psychological verbs) and they were explicitly asked to imagine the situation or they performed letter detection preventing them from using simulation (TASK: imagery vs. letter detection). A significant task by stimuli interaction showed that imagery of state/psychological verbs, as compared to action stimuli (controlled by the letter detection) selectively increased activation in the right supramarginal gyrus/rolandic operculum and in the right insula, and decreased activation in the right intraparietal sulcus. We compared these data to those from a group of older participants (Tomasino et al. 2014a). Activation in the left supramarginal gyrus decreased for the latter group (as compared to the present group) for imagery of state/psychological verbs. By contrast, activation in the right superior frontal gyrus decreased for the former group (as compared to the older group) for imagery of state/psychological verbs.
ISSN:0278-2626
1090-2147
DOI:10.1016/j.bandc.2018.02.010