Explaining category-related effects in the retrieval of conceptual and lexical knowledge for concrete entities: operationalization and analysis of factors
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2018, Consciousness and CognitionCitation Excerpt :A key feature of these theories is that representations are analogical, that is, they preserve some of the sensorimotor properties of the states that produced them (Barsalou, 1999; Glenberg, 1997): “a perceptual symbol is a record of the neural activation that arises during perception” (p. 583, Barsalou, 1999). From this standpoint, the mental representation of an object is ultimately grounded in a sensorimotor state, one in which semantic knowledge is distributed in the brain in a principled way—in or near the regions processing the kinds of information that constitute the semantic attributes (Kosslyn, Thompson, & Ganis, 2001; Martin, 2001; Thompson-Schill, Aguirre, D’Esposito, & Farah, 1999; Tranel, Damasio, & Damasio 1997; Tranel, Logan, Randall, & Damasio, 1997; Warrington, 1975). There is evidence that mental imagery involves to some extent the brain regions involved in perception (Ganis, Thompson, & Kosslyn, 2004; McNorgan, 2012; see discussion of this and some neuropsychological counterevidence in Andrade, May, Deeprose, Baugh, & Ganis, 2014). (
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