Motor Control in Action: Using Dance to Explore the Intricate Choreography Between Action Perception and Production in the Human Brain


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Date

2014-10

Publication Type

Book Chapter

ETH Bibliography

no

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Data

Abstract

When experienced dancers watch other dancers perform, they perceive the movement in a quantifiably different manner than nondancers. Is this simply a matter of dancers paying more attention and having greater interest in watching dance, or do quantifiable differences exist within the brains of skilled dancers compared to nondancers related to years of physical practice? Previous neurophysiological research offers insight into this question through the discovery of specialized cells in the monkey brain that are active in a similar manner when monkeys perform or observe the same movement. This discovery of so-called mirror neurons established the idea of a close correspondence between action perception and production. Since this discovery, myriad studies have focused on the relationship between action production and perception in the human brain by studying the execution and observation of simple finger or hand movements. Work with dancers, however, extends such investigations to the full-body domain and helps to uncover how individual experience shapes the links between watching and performing actions. Much of this research uses neuroscientific methods to advance understanding of not only the cerebral phenomena associated with complex action learning and observation but also the neural underpinnings of aesthetic appreciation when watching dance. The results of this work are starting to inform and mutually benefit both the scientific and artistic communities.

Publication status

published

Book title

Progress in Motor Control

Volume

826

Pages / Article No.

147 - 160

Publisher

Springer

Event

Edition / version

Methods

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Date created

Subject

Action; Perception; Neuroscience; Dance; Neuroaesthetics; Parietal; Premotor; Mirror system

Organisational unit

09800 - Cross, Emily S. / Cross, Emily S. check_circle

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