Abstract

Action understanding lies at the heart of social interaction. Prior research has often conceptualized this capacity in terms of a motoric matching of observed actions to an action in one’s motor repertoire, but has ignored the role of object information. In this manuscript, we set out an alternative conception of intention understanding, which places the role of objects as central to our observation and comprehension of the actions of others. We outline the current understanding of the interconnectedness of action and object knowledge, demonstrating how both rely heavily on the other. We then propose a novel framework, the affordance-matching hypothesis, which incorporates these findings into a simple model of action understanding, in which object knowledge—what an object is for and how it is used—can inform and constrain both action interpretation and prediction. We will review recent empirical evidence that supports such an object-based view of action understanding and we relate the affordance matching hypothesis to recent proposals that have re-conceptualized the role of mirror neurons in action understanding.

Highlights

  • Reviewed by: Cosimo Urgesi, University of Udine, Italy Sebo Uithol, Universitá degli Studi di Parma, Italy

  • We propose a novel framework, the affordance-matching hypothesis, which incorporates these findings into a simple model of action understanding, in which object knowledge—what an object is for and how it is used—can inform and constrain both action interpretation and prediction

  • ACTION UNDERSTANDING IN AN OBJECT CONTEXT: THE AFFORDANCE-MATCHING HYPOTHESIS Action understanding lies at the heart of social interaction

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Summary

Introduction

Reviewed by: Cosimo Urgesi, University of Udine, Italy Sebo Uithol, Universitá degli Studi di Parma, Italy. We propose a new view, which incorporates the available data on motoric matching and mirror neurons, but places them in a model of action understanding that emphasizes the role of object knowledge, which helps predict and interpret any observed motor act.

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