Automatic imitation of vocal actions is unaffected by group membership
Antony S. Trotter, Hannah Wilt, Patti Adank

TL;DR
The study finds that automatic imitation of vocal actions is not influenced by the sex of the speaker or participant.
Contribution
This study provides empirical evidence that group membership based on sex does not modulate automatic imitation in vocal tasks.
Findings
Automatic imitation remains unaffected by the sex of participants or distractors.
Response times in vocal tasks do not vary based on social group membership signals like sex.
The results suggest automatic imitation is largely stimulus-driven rather than socially modulated.
Abstract
Converging evidence from behavioural, neuroimaging, and neurostimulation studies demonstrates that action observation engages corresponding action production mechanisms, a phenomenon termed covert or automatic imitation. Behaviourally, automatic imitation is measured using the stimulus response compatibility (SRC) task, in which participants produce vocal responses whilst perceiving compatible or incompatible speech distractors. Automatic imitation is measured as the difference in response times (RT) between incompatible and compatible trials. It is unclear if and how social group membership, such as the speaker’s sex, affects automatic imitation. Two theoretical accounts make different predictions regarding effects of group membership: the first predicts that automatic imitation can be modulated by group membership, while the second predicts that automatic imitation likely remains…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAction Observation and Synchronization · Child and Animal Learning Development · Language, Metaphor, and Cognition
