Bisecting real and fake body parts: effects of prism adaptation after right brain damage

The representation of body parts holds a special status in the brain, due to their prototypical shape and the contribution of multisensory (visual and somatosensory-proprioceptive) information. In a previous study (Sposito et al., 2010), we showed that patients with left unilateral spatial neglect e...

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Main Authors: Nadia eBolognini, Debora eCasanova, Angelo eMaravita, Giuseppe eVallar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2012-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2012.00154/full
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spelling doaj-eb2db056fb684a6a89f131f67a06148f2020-11-25T02:19:05ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612012-06-01610.3389/fnhum.2012.0015422951Bisecting real and fake body parts: effects of prism adaptation after right brain damageNadia eBolognini0Debora eCasanova1Angelo eMaravita2Giuseppe eVallar3University Milano BicoccaUniversity Milano BicoccaUniversity Milano BicoccaUniversity Milano BicoccaThe representation of body parts holds a special status in the brain, due to their prototypical shape and the contribution of multisensory (visual and somatosensory-proprioceptive) information. In a previous study (Sposito et al., 2010), we showed that patients with left unilateral spatial neglect exhibit a rightward bias in setting the mid-point of their left forearm, which becomes larger when bisecting a cylindrical object comparable in size. This body part advantage, found also in control participants, suggests partly different processes for computing the extent of body parts and objects. In this study we tested 16 right-brain-damaged patients, and 10 unimpaired participants, on a manual bisection task of their own (real) left forearm, or a size-matched fake forearm. We then explored the effects of adaptation to rightward displacing prism exposure, which brings about leftward aftereffects. We found that all participants showed prism adaptation and aftereffects, with right-brain-damaged patients exhibiting a reduction of the rightward bias for both real and fake forearm, with no overall differences between them. Second, correlation analyses highlighted the role of visual and proprioceptive information for the metrics of body parts. Third, single-patient analyses showed dissociations between real and fake forearm bisections, and the effects of prism adaptation, as well as a more frequent impairment with fake body parts. In sum, the rightward bias shown by right-brain-damaged patients in bisecting body parts is reduced by prism exposure, as other components of the neglect syndrome; discrete spatial representations for real and fake body parts, for which visual and proprioceptive codes play different roles, are likely to exist. Multisensory information seems to render self bodily segments more resistant to the disruption brought about by right-hemisphere injury.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2012.00154/fullmultisensoryneglectbody representationprismatic adaptationbody schemarubber hand
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nadia eBolognini
Debora eCasanova
Angelo eMaravita
Giuseppe eVallar
spellingShingle Nadia eBolognini
Debora eCasanova
Angelo eMaravita
Giuseppe eVallar
Bisecting real and fake body parts: effects of prism adaptation after right brain damage
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
multisensory
neglect
body representation
prismatic adaptation
body schema
rubber hand
author_facet Nadia eBolognini
Debora eCasanova
Angelo eMaravita
Giuseppe eVallar
author_sort Nadia eBolognini
title Bisecting real and fake body parts: effects of prism adaptation after right brain damage
title_short Bisecting real and fake body parts: effects of prism adaptation after right brain damage
title_full Bisecting real and fake body parts: effects of prism adaptation after right brain damage
title_fullStr Bisecting real and fake body parts: effects of prism adaptation after right brain damage
title_full_unstemmed Bisecting real and fake body parts: effects of prism adaptation after right brain damage
title_sort bisecting real and fake body parts: effects of prism adaptation after right brain damage
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
issn 1662-5161
publishDate 2012-06-01
description The representation of body parts holds a special status in the brain, due to their prototypical shape and the contribution of multisensory (visual and somatosensory-proprioceptive) information. In a previous study (Sposito et al., 2010), we showed that patients with left unilateral spatial neglect exhibit a rightward bias in setting the mid-point of their left forearm, which becomes larger when bisecting a cylindrical object comparable in size. This body part advantage, found also in control participants, suggests partly different processes for computing the extent of body parts and objects. In this study we tested 16 right-brain-damaged patients, and 10 unimpaired participants, on a manual bisection task of their own (real) left forearm, or a size-matched fake forearm. We then explored the effects of adaptation to rightward displacing prism exposure, which brings about leftward aftereffects. We found that all participants showed prism adaptation and aftereffects, with right-brain-damaged patients exhibiting a reduction of the rightward bias for both real and fake forearm, with no overall differences between them. Second, correlation analyses highlighted the role of visual and proprioceptive information for the metrics of body parts. Third, single-patient analyses showed dissociations between real and fake forearm bisections, and the effects of prism adaptation, as well as a more frequent impairment with fake body parts. In sum, the rightward bias shown by right-brain-damaged patients in bisecting body parts is reduced by prism exposure, as other components of the neglect syndrome; discrete spatial representations for real and fake body parts, for which visual and proprioceptive codes play different roles, are likely to exist. Multisensory information seems to render self bodily segments more resistant to the disruption brought about by right-hemisphere injury.
topic multisensory
neglect
body representation
prismatic adaptation
body schema
rubber hand
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2012.00154/full
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