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Of bats and tables: How animacy impacts the brain in a variety of tasks

Ana Rita Sá-Leite, Juan Haro, Montserrat Comesaña, Isabel Fraga

Ciencia Cognitiva (2022), 16(2), 37-40

Abstract

Our brain is ancestrally wired to detect and process stimuli that are relevant for survival such as animates (i.e., entities that are alive, e.g., bats). Extensive research shows that many areas of our cognition give animates a special processing when compared to inanimates, even when inanimates may constitute a threat for life (vehicles). Recently, we obtained evidence that naming a simple animate noun may differ from that of an inanimate noun. This is probably due to attentional mechanisms favoring animates and a deeper conceptual processing of animacy to the detriment of other not-so-relevant features such as grammatical gender.

Cita APA

Sá-Leite, A. R., Haro, J., Comesaña, M., Fraga, I. (2022). Of bats and tables: How animacy impacts the brain in a variety of tasks. Ciencia Cognitiva, 16(2), 37-40. https://www.cienciacognitiva.org/?p=2212