Abstract

The dual-route model of imitation suggests that meaningful and meaningless actions are processed through either an indirect or a direct route, respectively. Evidence indicates that the direct route is more cognitively demanding since it relies on mapping visuospatial properties of the observed action on to a performed one. These cognitive demands might negatively influence reaction time and accuracy for actions performed following a meaningless action under time constraints. However, how meaningful and meaningless action imitation processing is reflected in movement kinematics is not yet clear. We wanted to confirm whether meaningless action performance incurs a reaction time cost, whether the cost is reflected in kinematics, and, more generally, to examine kinematic markers of emblematic meaningful and meaningless action imitation. We examined participants’ reaction time and wrist movements when they imitated emblematic meaningful or matched meaningless gestures in either blocks of the same action type or mixed blocks. Meaningless actions were associated with a greater correction period at the end of the movement, possibly reflecting a strategy designed to ensure accurate completion for less familiar actions under time constraints. Furthermore, in mixed blocks, trials following meaningless actions had a significantly increased reaction time, supporting previous claims that route selection for action imitation may be stimulus-driven. However, there was only convincing evidence for this effect with an interval of ~2,948ms, but not ~3,573ms or ~2,553ms, between movements. Future work motion-tracking the entire hand to assess imitation accuracy, and more closely examining the influence of duration between movements, may help to explain these effects.

Highlights

  • Humans can copy actions that they are familiar with as well as new actions that they have never seen before

  • Meaningless actions are processed using a direct route that relies on visuomotor mapping of the observed action in order to convert it into a performed action

  • Whilst we found that meaningless actions had a significantly smaller reaction time (RT) compared to meaningful actions, this effect was not confined to the blocked trials, and there was no longer a significant block type*meaning interaction

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Summary

Introduction

Humans can copy actions that they are familiar with as well as new actions that they have never seen before. The dissociation of deficits in meaningful and meaningless action imitation suggests a dual-route for different types of imitation, a model that has seen several developments and adaptations (see Buxbaum & Randerath, 2018 or Petreska et al, 2007 for review). Meaningless actions are processed using a direct route that relies on visuomotor mapping of the observed action in order to convert it into a performed action. Disruption to these routes could result in different performance deficits for different types of action imitation in apraxia (Tessari & Cubelli, 2014)

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