The Cognitive-Motor Interference (CMI) in Terms of Embodied Cognition
Description
- Tytuł: The Cognitive-Motor Interference (CMI) in Terms of Embodied Cognition
- Autor/Autorzy:
- Nazwa czasopisma: Acta Neuropsychologica
- Rok: 2025
- Tom: 23
- Numer: 1
- ISSN: 1730-7503
- e-ISSN: 2084-4298
- DOI: 10.5604/01.3001.0055.0276
- Adres www:: https://actaneuropsychologica.com/article/550276/en
- Strony od-do: 119-135
- Abstrakt: Cognitive-motor interference (CMI), described as being produced by the simultaneous performance of a cognitive and a motor task, has recently been proposed as a marker of real-life impairment in people with neurodegenerative diseases and post-stroke conditions. However, the very notion of CMI seems to be strongly embedded in the Cartesian dualistic framework, introducing an ontological bias that may yield superficial or even artificial research findings. In this meta-theoretical context, we propose to reconceptualize the notion of CMI in terms of embodied cognition (EC). Drawing from three theoretical approaches: 1) the concept of pre-reflective intentionality in phenomenology, 2) the premotor theory of attention (PToA) in cognitive neuroscience, and 3) the action-sentence compatibility effect (ACE) in experimental psychology, we outline a perspective described as the “spatial intentions interference effect.” By doing so, we hope to provide a more nuanced view of the research results obtained thus far in CMI studies and to establish a framework for its application in therapeutic interventions for neurodegenerative diseases and post-stroke rehabilitation.
- Dyscyplina:
- psychologia
- psychologia
MARC
- 002 a The Cognitive-Motor Interference (CMI) in Terms of Embodied Cognition
- 003 b 0000-0001-8754-8770
- 003 b 0000-0001-9771-4162
- 003 a EWA JAGLARZ (Autor)
- 003 a JACEK BIELAS (Autor)
- 003 a Rafał Abramciów (Autor)
- 004 a Artykuł przeglądowy
- 006 a Acta Neuropsychologica
- 008 a 2025
- 009 a 23
- 010 a 1
- 011 a 1730-7503
- 012 a 2084-4298
- 013 a 10.5604/01.3001.0055.0276
- 014 a https://actaneuropsychologica.com/article/550276/en
- 015 a 119-135
- 020 a Cognitive-motor interference (CMI), described as being produced by the simultaneous performance of a cognitive and a motor task, has recently been proposed as a marker of real-life impairment in people with neurodegenerative diseases and post-stroke conditions. However, the very notion of CMI seems to be strongly embedded in the Cartesian dualistic framework, introducing an ontological bias that may yield superficial or even artificial research findings. In this meta-theoretical context, we propose to reconceptualize the notion of CMI in terms of embodied cognition (EC). Drawing from three theoretical approaches: 1) the concept of pre-reflective intentionality in phenomenology, 2) the premotor theory of attention (PToA) in cognitive neuroscience, and 3) the action-sentence compatibility effect (ACE) in experimental psychology, we outline a perspective described as the “spatial intentions interference effect.” By doing so, we hope to provide a more nuanced view of the research results obtained thus far in CMI studies and to establish a framework for its application in therapeutic interventions for neurodegenerative diseases and post-stroke rehabilitation.
- 022 a cognitive-motor interference
- 022 a embodied cognition
- 022 a microgenetic theory
- 022 a neurodegenerative diseases
- 022 a pre-reflective intentionality
- 966 a psychologia
- 966 a psychologia
- 985 a Wydział Filozoficzny
- 985 b Instytut Psychologii
Dublin Core
Indexes
- Title: The Cognitive-Motor Interference (CMI) in Terms of Embodied Cognition
- Author:
- Journal: Acta Neuropsychologica
- Date: 2025
- Discipline: psychologia
- Słowa kluczowe w j. angielskim:
- Structure: