ERP-based evidence for the independent processing of structural and functional action semantics
Yanglan Yu, Qin Huang, Xudong Liu, Shiying Gao, Xuechen Mao, Anmin Li

TL;DR
This study shows that the brain processes structural and functional actions differently, with distinct neural patterns observed for each type.
Contribution
The study provides ERP-based evidence for independent neural processing of structural and functional action semantics.
Findings
Functional actions showed distinct neural differences in multiple time windows, including early and late activations in specific brain regions.
Structural actions activated different brain regions at later time windows, suggesting partial independence from functional action processing.
The results indicate that structural and functional action semantics are processed by partially separate neural mechanisms.
Abstract
In this study, the semantic processing and neural mechanisms of manipulative actions, categorized as structural actions and functional actions, were examined to assess whether these action types involve independent cognitive processes. Using a cue-stimulus paradigm with event-related potentials (ERPs), we analyzed neural responses to various manipulative actions. Manipulating the semantic congruency of structural actions (congruent vs. incongruent) and functional action types (wave vs. press) revealed distinct neural patterns. We observed distinct neural differences for functional actions in the 30–44 ms, 144–194 ms, 218–232 ms, 300–400 ms, and 562–576 ms windows. Early activation occurred in the left medial superior frontal gyrus, whereas sustained activity spread from the occipital and parietal regions to frontal regions between 144–194 ms and 300–400 ms. Late activation, occurring in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAction Observation and Synchronization · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies · EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces
