Communications Biology (Apr 2025)

Neurocognitive mechanisms underlying action tool knowledge tasks: specificity of tool-tool compared to hand-tool compatibility tasks

  • Mathieu Lesourd,
  • François Osiurak,
  • Julie Martin,
  • Sébastien Hague,
  • Margolise Laroze,
  • Gautier Clément,
  • Elisabeth Medeiros de Bustos,
  • Guillaume Fargeix,
  • Eloi Magnin,
  • Thierry Moulin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-025-07923-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Action tool knowledge can be assessed mainly with two kinds of tasks: tool-tool and hand-tool compatibility tasks. While these tasks are used to assess action tool knowledge, recent data showed striking dissociations between these tasks in brain-damaged patients. In this study, we explored the neuropsychological dissociations (Experiment 1; 60 brain-damaged patients) and the potential cognitive mechanisms engaged during these two tasks (Experiment 2; 52 healthy participants). Finally, we also reanalyzed fMRI data to investigate the neural bases engaged in tool-tool and hand-tool compatibility tasks (Experiment 3; 34 healthy participants). The three experiments provide convergent arguments by showing that both tasks share common core computations supported by a left-lateralized brain network, but hand-tool compatibility task engages regions outside of this brain network and is explained by visual imagery while tool-tool task is rather explained by motor imagery. Our results shed a new light on action tool knowledge tasks.