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Current theories in social cognition and cognitive psychology
conceptualize understanding of actions and of language describing
actions as the performance of sensorimotor simulations. Although
there is emerging empirical evidence for these theories, they are
currently underspecified and the evidence is correspondingly coarse.
Language is a sensitive tool that allows us to construe actions in
myriad ways. This article discusses several challenges that face
simulation theories aimed at capturing the subtlety of language. |