Abstract

During social interactions infants predict and evaluate other people’s actions. Previous behavioral research found that infants’ imitation of others’ actions depends on these evaluations and is context-dependent: 1-year-olds predominantly imitated an unusual action (turning on a lamp with one’s forehead) when the model’s hands were free compared to when the model’s hands were occupied or restrained. In the present study, we adapted this behavioral paradigm to a neurophysiological study measuring infants’ brain activity while observing usual and unusual actions via electroencephalography. In particular, we measured differences in mu power (6 – 8 Hz) associated with motor activation. In a between-subjects design, 12- to 14-month-old infants watched videos of adult models demonstrating that their hands were either free or restrained. Subsequent test frames showed the models turning on a lamp or a soundbox by using their head or their hand. Results in the hands-free condition revealed that 12- to 14-month-olds displayed a reduction of mu power in frontal regions in response to unusual and thus unexpected actions (head touch) compared to usual and expected actions (hand touch). This may be explained by increased motor activation required for updating prior action predictions in response to unusual actions though alternative explanations in terms of general attention or cognitive control processes may also be considered. In the hands-restrained condition, responses in mu frequency band did not differ between action outcomes. This implies that unusual head-touch actions compared to hand-touch actions do not necessarily evoke a reduction of mu power. Thus, we conclude that reduction of mu frequency power is context-dependent during infants’ action perception. Our results are interpreted in terms of motor system activity measured via changes in mu frequency band as being one important neural mechanism involved in action prediction and evaluation from early on.

Highlights

  • From birth on, infants take part in social interactions

  • We present evidence that motor activation in the mu frequency band is involved in infants’ action processing in the context of unknown objects and that infants take into account visible action constraints when evaluating actions on unknown objects

  • Visual inspection of the grand average FFTs indicated reduced mu power in response to the head touch compared to the hand touch

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Summary

Introduction

These interactions with others are essential for the development of social-cognitive skills (Striano and Reid, 2006). An important ability trained in such interactions is to predict another person’s behavior and to react . This ability comprises that if the prediction turns out to be wrong (prediction error), the corresponding. Motor Activation during Action Perception representation is updated appropriately (Kilner et al, 2007). We present evidence that motor activation in the mu frequency band is involved in infants’ action processing in the context of unknown objects and that infants take into account visible action constraints when evaluating actions on unknown objects

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