Anna Maria Borghi

Pubblicazioni

Titolo Pubblicato in Anno
Abstract words processing induces parasympathetic activation: A thermal imaging study FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY 2022
Abstractness emerges progressively over the second year of life SCIENTIFIC REPORTS 2022
A Natural Human-Drone Embodied Interface: Empirical Comparison With a Traditional Interface FRONTIERS IN NEUROROBOTICS 2022
Concepts for Which We Need Others More: The Case of Abstract Concepts CURRENT DIRECTIONS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE 2022
Abstract and concrete concepts in conversation SCIENTIFIC REPORTS 2022
Abstract concepts: external influences, internal constraints, and methodological issues PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH 2022
A computational model of inner speech supporting flexible goal-directed behaviour in Autism SCIENTIFIC REPORTS 2022
Abstract Concepts, Social Interaction, and Beliefs FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY 2022
Implicit effect of abstract/concrete components in the categorization of Chinese words JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 2022
Emotions Modulate Affordances-Related Motor Responses: A Priming Experiment FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY 2022
Merging affordances and (abstract) concepts Affordances in Everyday Life: a multidisciplinary collection of essays 2022
DOMENICO: PENSARE CHIARO, PENSARE FORTE SISTEMI INTELLIGENTI 2022
Embodied e grounded cognition e beyond: A revolution at the beginning|EMBODIED E GROUNDED COGNITION E OLTRE: UNA RIVOLUZIONE ALL'INIZIO GIORNALE ITALIANO DI PSICOLOGIA 2022
Abstractness emerges progressively over the second year of life OPEN ACCESS SCIENTIFIC REPORTS 2022
Controllability and demonstrative choice: an experiment on the semantics of this and that 18th Annual Conference of the Italian Association of Cognitive Sciences 2022
Perspective in the conceptualization of categories PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH 2021
Motor Inhibition to Dangerous Objects: Electrophysiological Evidence for Task-dependent Aversive Affordances JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE 2021
Is justice grounded? How expertise shapes conceptual representation of institutional concepts PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH 2021
Abstract concepts in interaction: the need of others when guessing abstract concepts smooths dyadic motor interactions ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE 2021
Abstract words as social tools: which necessary evidence? FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY 2021

ERC

  • SH4

Interessi di ricerca

I am interested in the relationship between objects, concepts, and language, and in how we react to the actions of others. The general view underlying my research is that cognition is embodied and grounded, in the environment and in bodily states. Cognition emerges from goal-derived interactions between the organisms and the environment. This view stresses the role of action for cognition, and it considers perception, action, and cognition as strictly interrelated. I am also interested in interoception, the sensitivity to our bodily signals. 

1) Objects and affordances: I am interested in affordances, i.e. the idea that objects evoke actions and that we think of objects in terms of the actions we typically perform with them. I work on how affordances are flexibly modulated by the context: by the task, by the presence of other objects, of other people potentially interacting with objects. I am also interested in the affordances of novel objects for children and adults, in affordances of dangerous objects, and in the distinction between more stable and more variable affordances. 

2) Concepts: I am interested in how concepts, the minimal units of our knowledge, tap on sensorimotor and interoceptive experience. I work on how concepts are dynamically updated depending on our goals and interaction with the environment, and how concepts link to each other through conceptual relations (thematic, taxonomic, etc.). I am interested in differences within concept kinds -e.g. artifacts vs. natural objects. I am particularly interested in abstract concepts (see below). 

3) Abstract concepts. I work on how we acquire, use and represent in the brain abstract concepts, like "fantasy" and "think". I am convinced that explaining them represents a big challenge for embodied and grounded views and that this challenge has to be addressed by recognizing the important role language plays for cognition. I believe that because the members of abstract concepts are more heterogeneous and variable than that of concrete concepts, like "table", for their acquisition and use the role of the linguistic and social input is more crucial. Consistently, linguistic networks should be more activated in the brain for abstract than for concrete concepts, and abstract concepts should be more variable across languages than concrete ones. I am also interested in the differences within concept kinds since abstract concepts come in a great variety - from emotional and social concepts to spatio-temporal and numerical concepts, to spiritual and philosophical concepts. I believe that the challenge to account for abstract concepts should be addressed by studying concepts with novel methods, i.e. investigating them during their use in interaction. With various collaborators, we have proposed are currently refining a theory of abstract concepts, the Words As social Tools (WAT). 

4) Language. I am interested in three main aspects:

1) how language is grounded in the sensorimotor and interoceptive system, eliciting a simulation during language comprehension. I study how this simulation is sensitive to properties of the objects (e.g. object size, weight, orientation), of the actions (e.g. whether the action involves the hand, the mouth, the leg, or other body parts), situations, and emotions described through language 

2) how language impacts cognition, changing the way in which we conceive our body (I am convinced that words can expand our perceived bodily borders) and the way we perceive objects and entities in the environment;

3) how different languages impact cognition. I am interested in cross-cultural comparisons. 

5) Actions of others: Automatic imitation and motor resonance.

I am interested in how we respond when we observe actions performed by others, on when we put ourselves in their shows, and on the mechanisms underlying imitative and joint / complementary actions. 

 

Keywords

affordances
Action recognition
Language
concepts
conceptual categories
abstraction
action
Abstract reasoning
Healthy ageing
connectedness with nature

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