| MIRROR NEURONS AND AUTISMA mirror neuron is a neuron which fires both when 
              an animal performs an action and when the animal observes the same 
              action performed by another (especially conspecific) animal. Thus, 
              the neuron "mirrors" the behavior of another animal, as 
              though the observer were itself performing the action. These neurons 
              have been directly observed in primates, and are believed to exist 
              in humans and in some birds. In humans, brain activity consistent 
              with mirror neurons has been found in the premotor cortex and the 
              inferior parietal cortex. Some scientists consider mirror neurons 
              one of the most important findings of neuroscience in the last decade. 
              Among them is V.S. Ramachandran1, who believes 
              they might be very important in imitation and language acquisition. 
              However, despite the popularity of this field, to date no plausible 
              neural or computational models have been put forward to describe 
              how mirror neuron activity supports cognitive functions such as 
              imitation. 
               
              IntroductionIn the monkey, mirror neurons are found in the 
              ventral premotor cortex (probably the equivalent of the inferior 
              frontal gyrus in humans) and in the anterior inferior parietal lobule. 
              These neurons are active when the monkeys perform certain tasks, 
              but they also fire when the monkeys watch or hear someone else perform 
              the same specific task. Researchers using fMRI, TMS, and EEG have 
              found evidence of a similar system (matching observations with actions), 
              in the human brain. 
               
             The function of the mirror system is a subject 
              of much speculation. These neurons may be important for understanding 
              the actions of other people, and for learning new skills by imitation. 
              Some researchers also speculate that mirror systems may simulate 
              observed actions, and thus contribute to our theory of mind skills, 
              2 3 while others relate mirror neurons to 
              language abilities. 4 It has also been proposed 
              that problems with the mirror system may underlie cognitive disorders, 
              in particular autism. 5 6
             Research into all of these possibilities is ongoing. 
               
             DiscoveryIn the 1980s and 1990s, Giacomo Rizzolatti was 
              working with Luciano Fadiga, Leonardo Fogassi and Vittorio Gallese 
              at the university in Parma, Italy. These scientists had placed electrodes 
              in the inferior frontal cortex of the macaque monkey to study neurons 
              specialised for the control of hand actions, for example, grabbing 
              objects, picking items up etc. During each experiment, they recorded 
              from a single neuron in the monkey's brain while the monkey was 
              allowed to reach for pieces of food, so the researchers could measure 
              the neuron's response to certain movements. 7
   
             This work has since been published 8 
              and confirmed 9 with mirror neurons found 
              in both inferior frontal and inferior parietal regions of the brain. 
              Recently, evidence from fMRI, TMS and EEG and behavioral strongly 
              suggest the presence of similar systems in humans, where brain regions 
              which respond during both action and the observation of action have 
              been identified. Not surprisingly, these brain regions closely match 
              those found in the macaque monkey 10. 
               
             More recently Keysers and colleagues have shown 
              that both in humans and monkeys, the mirror system also responds 
              to the sound of actions 11 12.
   
             Mirror neurons in monkeysThe only animal where mirror neurons have been 
              studied individually is the macaque monkey. In these monkeys, mirror 
              neurons are found in the inferior frontal gyrus (region F5) and 
              the inferior parietal lobule. 13
   
             Mirror neurons are believed to mediate the understanding 
              of other animal's behavior. For example, a mirror neuron which fires 
              when the monkey rips a piece of paper would also fire when the monkey 
              sees a person rip paper, or hears paper ripping (without visual 
              information). These properties have led researchers to believe that 
              mirror neurons encode abstract concepts of actions like 'ripping 
              paper', whether the action is performed by the monkey or another 
              animal. 14
   
             The function of mirror neurons in macaques is 
              not known. Adult macaques do not seem to learn by imitation. Recent 
              experiments suggest that infant macaqes can imitate a human's face 
              movements, only as neonates and during a limited temporal window 
              15. However, it is not known if mirror neurons 
              underlie this behaviour. 
               
             In adult monkeys, mirror neurons may enable the 
              monkey to understand what another monkey is doing, or to recognise 
              the other monkey's action. 16
   
             The mirror neuron system in humansIt is not normally possible to study single neurons 
              in the human brain, so scientists can not be certain that humans 
              have mirror neurons. However, the results of brain imaging experiments 
              have shown that the human inferior frontal cortex and superior parietal 
              lobule is active when the person performs an action and also when 
              the person sees another individual performing an action. Therefore, 
              these brain regions are likely to contain mirror neurons and have 
              been defined as the human mirror neuron system. 17 
              Human infant data suggest that the mirror neuron system develops 
              before 12 months of age, and that this system helps human infants 
              understand other peoples' actions. 18
               
             Many different functions for the mirror neuron 
              system have been suggested. These include: 
              
             Understanding Intentions Many studies link mirror neurons to understanding 
              goals and intentions. Fogassi et al. (2005) 19 recorded 
              the activity of 41 mirror neurons in the inferior parietal lobe 
              (IPL) of two rhesus macaques. The IPL has long been recognized as 
              an association cortex that integrates sensory information. The monkeys 
              watched an experimenter either grasp an apple and bring it to his 
              mouth or grasp an object and place it in a cup. In total, 15 mirror 
              neurons fired vigorously when the monkey observed the "grasp-to-eat" 
              motion, but registered no activity while exposed to the "grasp-to-place" 
              condition. For four other mirror neurons, the reverse held true: 
              they activated in response to the experimenter eventually placing 
              the apple in the cup but not to eating it. Only the type of action, 
              and not the kinematic force with which models manipulated objects, 
              determined neuron activity. Significantly, neurons fired before 
              the monkey observed the human model starting the second motor act 
              (bringing the object to the mouth or placing it in a cup). Therefore, 
              IPL neurons "code the same act (grasping) in a different way 
              according to the final goal of the action in which the act is embedded" 
              (664). They may furnish a neural basis for predicting another individual’s 
              subsequent actions and inferring intention. 
               
             EmpathyMirror neurons have been linked to empathy, because 
              certain brain regions (in particular the anterior insula and inferior 
              frontal cortex) are active when a person experience an emotion (disgust, 
              happiness, pain etc) and when they see another person experience 
              an emotion. 21 22 23 However, these brain 
              regions are not quite the same as the ones which mirror hand actions, 
              and mirror neurons for emotional states or empathy have not yet 
              been described in monkeys. More recently, Keysers and colleagues 
              have shown that people that are more empathic according to self-report 
              questionnaires have stronger activations both in the mirror system 
              for hand actions 23 and the mirror system 
              for emotions 24 providing more direct support 
              to the idea that the mirror system is linked to empathy. 
               
             LanguageIn humans, mirror neurons have been found in the 
              inferior frontal cortex, close to Broca's area, a language region. 
              This has lead to suggestions that human language evolved from a 
              gesture performance/understanding system implemented in mirror neurons. 
              Mirror neurons certainly have the potential to provide a mechanism 
              for action understanding, imitation learning, and the simulation 
              of other people's behaviour. 25 However, 
              like many theories of language evolution, there is little direct 
              evidence either way. 
               
             AutismSome researchers claim there is a link between 
              mirror neuron deficiency and Autism. 
              In typical children, EEG recordings from motor areas are suppressed 
              when the child watches another person move, and this is believed 
              to be an index of mirror neuron activity. However, this suppression 
              is not seen in children with Autism 26. Also, 
              children with Autism have less activity in mirror neuron regions 
              of the brain when imitating 27. Based on 
              these results, some researchers claim that Autism is caused by a 
              lack of mirror neurons, leading to disabilities in social skills, 
              imitation, empathy and theory of mind. This is just one of many 
              theories of Autism and it has not yet been proven. 
               
             Theory of Mind 
             In Philosophy of mind, mirror neurons have become 
              the primary rallying call of simulation theorists concerning our 
              'theory of mind.' 'Theory 
              of mind' refers to our ability to infer another person's mental 
              state (i.e., beliefs and desires) from their experiences or their 
              behavior. For example, if you see a person reaching into a jar labelled 
              'cookies,' you might assume that he wants a cookie (even if you 
              know the jar is empty) and that he believes there are cookies in 
              the jar. 
               
             There are several competing models which attempt 
              to account for our theory of mind; the most notable in relation 
              to mirror neurons is simulation theory. According to simulation 
              theory, theory of mind is available because we subconsciously put 
              ourselves in the shoes of the person we're observing and, accounting 
              for relevant differences, imagine what we would desire and believe 
              in that scenario. 28 29 Mirror neurons have 
              been interpreted as the mechanism by which we simulate others in 
              order to better understand them, and therefore their discovery has 
              been taken by some as a validation of simulation theory (which appeared 
              a decade before the discovery of mirror neurons). 30
               
             Gender differencesStronger EEG responses related to the mirror neuron 
              system have been recorded in women compared to men 31. 
              This finding is consistent with the idea that women tend to be more 
              empathetic, that the mirror neuron system is related to empathy, 
              and that weak responses in the mirror neuron system could be linked 
              to a masculine mind and to autism 32. However, 
              these ideas have not been tested in full. 
               
             Footnotes1. ^ V.S. Ramachandran, Mirror Neurons and imitation 
              learning as the driving force behind "the great leap forward" 
              in human evolution. Edge Foundation. Retrieved on 2006-11-16.2. ^ Christian Keysers and Valeria Gazzola, Progress in Brain Research, 
              2006, [1]
 3. ^ Michael Arbib, The Mirror System Hypothesis. Linking Language 
              to Theory of Mind, 2005, retrieved 2006-02-17
 4. ^ Hugo Théoret, Alvaro Pascual-Leone, Language Acquisition: Do 
              As You Hear, Current Biology, Vol. 12, No. 21, pp. R736-R737, 2002-10-29
 5. ^ Oberman LM, Hubbard EM, McCleery JP, Altschuler EL, Ramachandran 
              VS, Pineda JA., EEG evidence for mirror neuron dysfunction in autism 
              spectral disorders, Brain Res Cogn Brain Res.; 24(2):190-8, 2005-06
 6. ^ Mirella Dapretto, Understanding emotions in others: mirror 
              neuron dysfunction in children with Autism Spectrum Disorders, Nature 
              Neuroscience, Vol. 9, No. 1, pp. 28-30, 2006-01
 7. ^ Giacomo Rizzolatti et al. (1996). Premotor cortex and the recognition 
              of motor actions, Cognitive Brain Research 3 131-141
 8. ^ Gallese et al, Action recognition in the premotor cortex, Brain, 
              1996
 9. ^ Fogassi et al, Parietal Lobe: From Action Organization to Intention 
              Understanding, Science, 2005
 10. ^ Rizzolatti G., Craighero L., The mirror-neuron system, Annual 
              Review of Neuroscience. 2004;27:169-92
 11. ^ Kohler et al., Science, 2002 [2]
 12. ^ Gazzola et al., Current Biology, 2006 [3]
 13. ^ Rizzolatti G., Craighero L., The mirror-neuron system, Annual 
              Review of Neuroscience. 2004;27:169-92
 14. ^ Giacomo Rizzolatti and Laila Craighero Annu. Rev. Neurosci. 
              2004. 27:169–92
 15. ^ Ferrari PF, Visalberghi E, Paukner A, Fogassi L, Ruggiero 
              A, et al. (2006) Neonatal Imitation in Rhesus Macaques. PLoS Biol 
              4(9): e302
 16. ^ Giacomo Rizzolatti and Michael A. Arbib, Language within our 
              grasp, Trends in neurosciences, Vol. 21, No. 5, 1998
 17. ^ Marco Iacoboni, Roger P. Woods, Marcel Brass, Harold Bekkering, 
              John C. Mazziotta, Giacomo Rizzolatti, Cortical Mechanisms of Human 
              Imitation, Science 286:5449 (1999)
 18. ^ Terje Falck-Ytter, Gustaf Gredebäck & Claes von Hofsten, 
              Infants predict other people's action goals, Nature Neuroscience 
              9 (2006)
 19. ^ Fogassi, Leonardo, Pier Francesco Ferrari, Benno Gesierich, 
              Stefano Rozzi, Fabian Chersi, Giacomo Rizzolatti. 2005. Parietal 
              lobe: from action organization to intention understanding. Science 
              308: 662-667.
 20. ^ Wicker et al., Neuron, 2003 [4]
 21. ^ Singer et al., Science, 2004 [5]
 22. ^ Jabbi, Swart and Keysers, NeuroImage, 2006 [6]
 23. ^ Gazzola, Aziz-Zadeh and Keysers, Current Biology, 2006 [7]
 24. ^ Jabbi, Swart and Keysers, NeuroImage, 2006 [8]
 25. ^ Skoyles, John R., Gesture, Language Origins, and Right Handedness, 
              Psycoloquy: 11,#24, 2000
 26. ^ Oberman LM, Hubbard EM, McCleery JP, Altschuler EL, Ramachandran 
              VS, Pineda JA., EEG evidence for mirror neuron dysfunction in autism 
              spectral disorders, Brain Res Cogn Brain Res.; 24(2):190-8, 2005-06
 27. ^ Mirella Dapretto, Understanding emotions in others: mirror 
              neuron dysfunction in children with Autism Spectrum Disorders, Nature 
              Neuroscience, Vol. 9, No. 1, pp. 28-30, 2006-01
 28. ^ Gordon, R. (1986). Folk psychology as simulation. Mind and 
              Language 1: 158-171
 29. ^ Goldman, A. (1989). Interpretation psychologized. Mind and 
              Language 4: 161–185
 30. ^ Gallese, V., and Goldman, A. (1998). Mirror neurons and the 
              simulation theory of mindreading. Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 
              2: 493–501
 31. ^ Cheng, Y. W., Tzeng, O. J. L., Decety, J., Imada, T., Hsieh, 
              J. C. 2006. Gender differences in the human mirror system: a magnetoencephalography 
              study. Neuroreport. 2006 Jul 31;17(11):1115-9
 32. ^ Baron-Cohen, S. 2003. The Essential Difference: The Truth 
              about the Male and Female Brain. NY: Basic Books
   
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              syndrome-related article at http://en.wikipedia.org/Mirro_neuron |