Frontiers in Psychology (Feb 2015)

Virtual action and real action have different impacts on comprehension of concrete verbs

  • Claudia eRepetto,
  • Pietro eCipresso,
  • Pietro eCipresso,
  • Giuseppe eRiva,
  • Giuseppe eRiva

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00176
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

Read online

In the last decade, many results have been reported supporting the hypothesis that language has an embodied nature. According to this theory, the sensorimotor system is involved in linguistic processes such as semantic comprehension. One of the cognitive processes emerging from the interplay between action and language is motor simulation.The aim of the present study is to deepen the knowledge about the simulation of action verbs during comprehension in a virtual reality setting. We compared two experimental conditions with different motor tasks: one in which the participants ran in a virtual world by moving the joypad knob with their left hand (virtual action performed with their feet plus real action performed with the hand) and one in which they only watched a video of runners and executed an attentional task by moving the joypad knob with their left hand (no virtual action plus real action performed with the hand). In both conditions, participants had to perform a concomitant go/no-go semantic task, in which they were asked to press a button (with their right hand) when presented with a sentence containing a concrete verb, and to refrain from providing a response when the verb was abstract. Action verbs described actions performed with hand, foot or mouth. We recorded EMG latencies to measure reaction times of the linguistic task. We wanted to test if the simulation occurs, whether it is triggered by the virtual or the real action, and which effect it produces (facilitation or interference). Results underlined that those who virtually ran in the environment were faster in understanding foot-action verbs; no simulation effect was found for the real action.The present findings are discussed in the light of the embodied language framework, and a hypothesis is provided that integrates our results with the literature data.

Keywords