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Embodiment during reading: Simulating a story character's linguistic actions.

Danielle N Gunraj1, April M Drumm-Hewitt2, Celia M Klin1

  • 1Department of Psychology.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Language comprehension involves sensorimotor simulations of characters' actions. When readers' actions matched the described actions (reading or speaking), a rate effect was found, supporting embodied cognition theories.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Linguistics
  • Neuroscience

Background:

  • Embodied cognition theory posits sensorimotor simulations are key to language comprehension.
  • Research has primarily focused on motor actions, not linguistic actions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if readers simulate characters' linguistic actions (reading, speaking).
  • To test if action-sentence compatibility extends to linguistic actions.

Main Methods:

  • Four experiments described characters reading or speaking at different speeds.
  • Participants read silently or aloud, matching or mismatching the character's action.
  • Measured reading/speaking rate as a function of action compatibility and speed.

Main Results:

  • An action-sentence compatibility effect was observed.
  • A rate effect (slower reading/speaking for slow descriptions) occurred only when participant and character actions matched.
  • This match applied to both reading and speaking actions.

Conclusions:

  • Comprehending linguistic actions involves sensorimotor simulations, similar to other actions.
  • Supports the embodied view of language processing extending to auditory and visual linguistic simulations.