@article{Arbib_Mundhenk05np,
  author = {M. A. Arbib and T. N. Mundhenk},
  title = {Schizophrenia and the mirror system: an essay},
  journal = {Neuropsychologia},
  volume = {43},
  number = {2},
  pages = {268-280},
  month = {Feb},
  year = {2005},
  abstract = {We analyze how data on the mirror system for grasping in macaque and human ground the mirror system hypothesis for the evolution of the language-ready human brain, and then focus on this putative relation between hand movements and speech to contribute to the understanding of how it may be that a schizophrenic patient generates an action (whether manual or verbal) but does not attribute the generation of that action to himself. We make a crucial discussion between self-monitoring and attribution of agency. We suggest that vebal hallucinations occur when an utterance progresses through verbal creation pathways and returns as a vocalization observed, only to be dismissed as external since no record of its being created has been kept. Schizophrenic patients on this theory then confabulate the agent.},
  address = {Computer Science, Neuroscience, and the USC Brain Project, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-2520, USA.},
  type = {mod ; sc},
  file = {http://iLab.usc.edu/publications/doc/Arbib_Mundhenk05np.pdf},
  if = {2003 impact factor: 2.695}
}

