Spatial frequency tuning of motor responses reveals differential contribution of dorsal and ventral systems to action comprehension
Date
2020Author
Amoruso, Lucia
Finisguerra, Alessandra
Urgesi, Cosimo
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Spatial frequency tuning of motor responses reveals differential contribution of dorsal and ventral systems to action comprehension Lucia Amoruso, Alessandra Finisguerra, Cosimo Urgesi Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Jun 2020, 117 (23) 13151-13161; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1921512117
Abstract
Understanding object-directed actions performed by others is central
to everyday life. This ability is thought to rely on the interaction
between the dorsal action observation network (AON) and a
ventral object recognition pathway. On this view, the AON would
encode action kinematics, and the ventral pathway, the most likely
intention afforded by the objects. However, experimental evidence
supporting this model is still scarce. Here, we aimed to disentangle
the contribution of dorsal vs. ventral pathways to action
comprehension by exploiting their differential tuning to lowspatial
frequencies (LSFs) and high-spatial frequencies (HSFs). We
filtered naturalistic action images to contain only LSF or HSF and
measured behavioral performance and corticospinal excitability
(CSE) using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Actions were
embedded in congruent or incongruent scenarios as defined by
the compatibility between grips and intentions afforded by the
contextual objects. Behaviorally, participants were better at discriminating
congruent actions in intact than LSF images. This effect
was reversed for incongruent actions, with better performance for
LSF than intact and HSF. These modulations were mirrored at the
neurophysiological level, with greater CSE facilitation for congruent
than incongruent actions for HSF and the opposite pattern for
LSF images. Finally, only for LSF did we observe CSE modulations
according to grip kinematics. While results point to differential
dorsal (LSF) and ventral (HSF) contributions to action comprehension
for grip and context encoding, respectively, the negative congruency
effect for LSF images suggests that object processing may
influence action perception not only through ventral-to-dorsal
connections, but also through a dorsal-to-dorsal route involved
in predictive processing.