Why motor imagery is not really motoric: towards a re-conceptualization in terms of effect-based action control

Autor(en): Bach, Patric
Frank, Cornelia 
Kunde, Wilfried
Stichwörter: ATTENTIONAL FOCUS; EXECUTION; MENTAL PRACTICE; MOVEMENTS; PENDULUM; PERCEPTION; Psychology; Psychology, Experimental; REPRESENTATION; TOOL-USE; VISUAL-CORTEX REVEALS; VOLUNTARY
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Herausgeber: SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
Journal: PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH-PSYCHOLOGISCHE FORSCHUNG
Zusammenfassung: 
Overt and imagined action seem inextricably linked. Both have similar timing, activate shared brain circuits, and motor imagery influences overt action and vice versa. Motor imagery is, therefore, often assumed to recruit the same motor processes that govern action execution, and which allow one to play through or simulate actions offline. Here, we advance a very different conceptualization. Accordingly, the links between imagery and overt action do not arise because action imagery is intrinsically motoric, but because action planning is intrinsically imaginistic and occurs in terms of the perceptual effects one want to achieve. Seen like this, the term `motor imagery' is a misnomer of what is more appropriately portrayed as `effect imagery'. In this article, we review the long-standing arguments for effect-based accounts of action, which are often ignored in motor imagery research. We show that such views provide a straightforward account of motor imagery. We review the evidence for imagery-execution overlaps through this new lens and argue that they indeed emerge because every action we execute is planned, initiated and controlled through an imagery-like process. We highlight findings that this new view can now explain and point out open questions.
ISSN: 0340-0727
DOI: 10.1007/s00426-022-01773-w

Zur Langanzeige

Seitenaufrufe

2
Letzte Woche
1
Letzter Monat
0
geprüft am 18.05.2024

Google ScholarTM

Prüfen

Altmetric