Neural correlates of the enactment effect in the brain

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksPublished abstract in conference proceedingsResearch

Standard

Neural correlates of the enactment effect in the brain. / Neidhardt, Eva; Mack, W.; Russ, M. et al.
Beiträge zur 49. Tagung Experimentell Arbeitender Psychologen: 26. bis 28. März 2007 in Trier. ed. / Karl F. Wender; Silvia Mecklenbräuker; Günter Daniel Rey; Thomas Wehr. Lengerich: Pabst Science Publishers, 2007. p. 209.

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksPublished abstract in conference proceedingsResearch

Harvard

Neidhardt, E, Mack, W, Russ, M & Lanfermann, H 2007, Neural correlates of the enactment effect in the brain. in KF Wender, S Mecklenbräuker, GD Rey & T Wehr (eds), Beiträge zur 49. Tagung Experimentell Arbeitender Psychologen: 26. bis 28. März 2007 in Trier. Pabst Science Publishers, Lengerich, pp. 209, Tagung Experimentell Arbeitender Psychologen, Trier, 26.03.07.

APA

Neidhardt, E., Mack, W., Russ, M., & Lanfermann, H. (2007). Neural correlates of the enactment effect in the brain. In K. F. Wender, S. Mecklenbräuker, G. D. Rey, & T. Wehr (Eds.), Beiträge zur 49. Tagung Experimentell Arbeitender Psychologen: 26. bis 28. März 2007 in Trier (pp. 209). Pabst Science Publishers.

Vancouver

Neidhardt E, Mack W, Russ M, Lanfermann H. Neural correlates of the enactment effect in the brain. In Wender KF, Mecklenbräuker S, Rey GD, Wehr T, editors, Beiträge zur 49. Tagung Experimentell Arbeitender Psychologen: 26. bis 28. März 2007 in Trier. Lengerich: Pabst Science Publishers. 2007. p. 209

Bibtex

@inbook{c4b271d6198c4b928b51946d29a24237,
title = "Neural correlates of the enactment effect in the brain",
abstract = "A better recall for subject-performed actions compared to similar action phrases encoded verbally is a well known phenomenon (e.g. Knopf & Neidhardt, 1989). There is an ongoing discussion about the basis of this so called enactment effect. Recent fMRI studies encour-aged theories which assume other mechanisms than just a motor modality effect. In the Russ et al. study (2004) brain activity for recognition of subject-performed vs. verbally en-coded action events was located in the gyrus supramarginalis, a structure that is involved in gesture production and related coding processes. The findings we want to present of two recent studies point to a structure nearby (gyrus angularis). Additionally, when com-paring target recognition to distractor rejection we consistently found activation in temporal brain areas that are not currently known to be related to episodic memory so long. ",
keywords = "Business psychology",
author = "Eva Neidhardt and W. Mack and M. Russ and H. Lanfermann",
year = "2007",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3899673715",
pages = "209",
editor = "Wender, {Karl F.} and Silvia Mecklenbr{\"a}uker and Rey, {G{\"u}nter Daniel} and Thomas Wehr",
booktitle = "Beitr{\"a}ge zur 49. Tagung Experimentell Arbeitender Psychologen",
publisher = "Pabst Science Publishers",
address = "Germany",
note = "Tagung Experimentell Arbeitender Psychologen ; Conference date: 26-03-2007 Through 28-03-2007",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Neural correlates of the enactment effect in the brain

AU - Neidhardt, Eva

AU - Mack, W.

AU - Russ, M.

AU - Lanfermann, H.

N1 - Conference code: 49

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - A better recall for subject-performed actions compared to similar action phrases encoded verbally is a well known phenomenon (e.g. Knopf & Neidhardt, 1989). There is an ongoing discussion about the basis of this so called enactment effect. Recent fMRI studies encour-aged theories which assume other mechanisms than just a motor modality effect. In the Russ et al. study (2004) brain activity for recognition of subject-performed vs. verbally en-coded action events was located in the gyrus supramarginalis, a structure that is involved in gesture production and related coding processes. The findings we want to present of two recent studies point to a structure nearby (gyrus angularis). Additionally, when com-paring target recognition to distractor rejection we consistently found activation in temporal brain areas that are not currently known to be related to episodic memory so long.

AB - A better recall for subject-performed actions compared to similar action phrases encoded verbally is a well known phenomenon (e.g. Knopf & Neidhardt, 1989). There is an ongoing discussion about the basis of this so called enactment effect. Recent fMRI studies encour-aged theories which assume other mechanisms than just a motor modality effect. In the Russ et al. study (2004) brain activity for recognition of subject-performed vs. verbally en-coded action events was located in the gyrus supramarginalis, a structure that is involved in gesture production and related coding processes. The findings we want to present of two recent studies point to a structure nearby (gyrus angularis). Additionally, when com-paring target recognition to distractor rejection we consistently found activation in temporal brain areas that are not currently known to be related to episodic memory so long.

KW - Business psychology

UR - http://d-nb.info/983539952/04

M3 - Published abstract in conference proceedings

SN - 978-3899673715

SN - 3899673719

SP - 209

BT - Beiträge zur 49. Tagung Experimentell Arbeitender Psychologen

A2 - Wender, Karl F.

A2 - Mecklenbräuker, Silvia

A2 - Rey, Günter Daniel

A2 - Wehr, Thomas

PB - Pabst Science Publishers

CY - Lengerich

T2 - Tagung Experimentell Arbeitender Psychologen

Y2 - 26 March 2007 through 28 March 2007

ER -

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