Abstract

During social interactions we often have an automatic and unconscious tendency to copy or ‘mimic’ others’ actions. The dominant view on the neural basis of mimicry appeals to an automatic coupling between perception and action. It has been suggested that this coupling is formed through associative learning during correlated sensorimotor experience. Although studies with adult participants have provided support for this hypothesis, little is known about the role of sensorimotor experience in supporting the development of perceptual‐motor couplings, and consequently mimicry behaviour, in infancy. Here we investigated whether the extent to which an observed action elicits mimicry depends on the opportunity an infant has had to develop perceptual‐motor couplings for this action through correlated sensorimotor experience. We found that mothers’ tendency to imitate their 4‐month‐olds’ facial expressions during a parent‐child interaction session was related to infants’ facial mimicry as measured by electromyography. Maternal facial imitation was not related to infants’ mimicry of hand actions, and instead we found preliminary evidence that infants’ tendency to look at their own hands may be related to their tendency to mimic hand actions. These results are consistent with the idea that mimicry is supported by perceptual‐motor couplings that are formed through correlated sensorimotor experience obtained by observing one's own actions and imitative social partners.

Highlights

  • Mimicry, the spontaneous and unconscious tendency to copy others’ behaviour, is ubiquitous in our everyday social interactions

  • This study investigated whether the extent to which an observed ac‐ tion elicits mimicry depends on the opportunity the infant has had to develop perceptual‐motor couplings for this action through corre‐ lated sensorimotor experience

  • These findings are consistent with a recent study by Rayson et al (2017), that showed that maternal facial imitation during a parent‐child interaction (PCI) session at 2 months was related to the infants’ sensorimotor cortex activation during the observation of facial actions at 9 months

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Summary

Introduction

The spontaneous and unconscious tendency to copy others’ behaviour, is ubiquitous in our everyday social interactions. Mimicry is thought to be supported by the mirror neuron system (MNS), and by connections between the superior temporal sulcus (STS), involved in processing the kinematics of observed actions, and the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), that represents the motor commands needed to perform these actions (Likowski, Mühlberger, Gerdes, Wieser, Pauli, & Weyers, 2012; Wang, Ramsey, & Hamilton, 2011). These connec‐ tions provide a direct link between perception and action, where the perception of an action activates the motor representation of this.

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