Action/verb processing: Debates in neuroimaging and the contribution of studies in patients with parkinson's disease

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Abstract

The objective of the current review was to verify whether studies investigating lexical-semantic diffculties in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) support the Embodied Cognition model. Under this framework, it is predicted that patients with PD will have more diffculties in the semantic processing of action concepts (action verbs) than of motionless objects. We also verifed how and whether these studies are following current debates of Neuroscience, particularly the debate between the Lexical and the Embodied Cognition models. Recent neuroimaging studies on the neural basis of the semantics of verbs were presented, as well as others that focused on the neural processing of verbs in PD. We concluded that few studies suitably verifed the Embodied Cognition theory in the context of PD, especially using neuroimaging techniques. These limitations show there is much to investigate on the semantic diffculties with action verbs in these patients, where it is particularly important to control for psycholinguistic variables and the inherent semantic characteristics of verbs in future studies.

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da Silva, H. S., Machado, J., Cravo, A., Parente, M. A. de M. P., & Carthery-Goulart, M. T. (2014). Action/verb processing: Debates in neuroimaging and the contribution of studies in patients with parkinson’s disease. Dementia e Neuropsychologia, 8(1), 3–13. https://doi.org/10.1590/s1980-57642014dn81000002

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