Literature DB >> 28705456

Feeling touch on the own hand restores the capacity to visually discriminate it from someone else' hand: Pathological embodiment receding in brain-damaged patients.

Carlotta Fossataro1, Valentina Bruno1, Patrizia Gindri2, Lorenzo Pia3, Anna Berti3, Francesca Garbarini4.   

Abstract

The sense of body ownership, i.e., the belief that a specific body part belongs to us, can be selectively impaired in brain-damaged patients. Recently, a pathological form of embodiment has been described in patients who, when the examiner's hand is located in a body-congruent position, systematically claim that it is their own hand (E+ patients). This paradoxical behavior suggests that, in these patients, the altered sense of body ownership also affects their capacity of visually discriminating the body-identity details of the own and the alien hand, even when both hands are clearly visible on the table. Here, we investigated whether, in E+ patients with spared tactile sensibility, a coherent body ownership could be restored by introducing a multisensory conflict between what the patients feel on the own hand and what they see on the alien hand. To this aim, we asked the patients to rate their sense of body ownership over the alien hand, either after segregated tactile stimulations of the own hand (out of view) and of the alien hand (visible) or after synchronous and asynchronous tactile stimulations of both hands, as in the rubber hand illusion set-up. Our results show that, when the tactile sensation perceived on the patient's own hand was in conflict with visual stimuli observed on the examiner's hand, E+ patients noticed the conflict and spontaneously described visual details of the (visible) examiner's hand (e.g., the fingers length, the nails shape, the skin color…), to conclude that it was not their own hand. These data represent the first evidence that, in E+ patients, an incongruent visual-tactile stimulation of the own and of the alien hand reduces, at least transitorily, the delusional body ownership over the alien hand, by restoring the access to the perceptual self-identity system, where visual body identity details are stored.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Body awareness; Brain-damaged patients; Multisensory conflict; Pathological embodiment; Sense of body ownership

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28705456     DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2017.06.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cortex        ISSN: 0010-9452            Impact factor:   4.027


  8 in total

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Authors:  V Moro; M Scandola; S M Aglioti
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2022-06-13

2.  Editorial: Body Representation and Interoceptive Awareness: Cognitive, Affective, and Social Implications.

Authors:  Simona Raimo; Matteo Martini; Cecilia Guariglia; Gabriella Santangelo; Luigi Trojano; Liana Palermo
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-06-08

3.  'See Me, Feel Me': Prismatic Adaptation of an Alien Limb Ameliorates Spatial Neglect in a Patient Affected by Pathological Embodiment.

Authors:  Irene Ronga; Francesca Garbarini; Marco Neppi-Modona; Carlotta Fossataro; Maria Pyasik; Valentina Bruno; Pietro Sarasso; Giulia Barra; Marta Frigerio; Virginia Carola Chiotti; Lorenzo Pia
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2019-01-14

4.  How Tool-Use Shapes Body Metric Representation: Evidence From Motor Training With and Without Robotic Assistance.

Authors:  Valentina Bruno; Ilaria Carpinella; Marco Rabuffetti; Lorenzo De Giuli; Corrado Sinigaglia; Francesca Garbarini; Maurizio Ferrarin
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2019-09-12       Impact factor: 3.169

5.  Structural connectivity associated with the sense of body ownership: a diffusion tensor imaging and disconnection study in patients with bodily awareness disorder.

Authors:  Antonino Errante; Alice Rossi Sebastiano; Settimio Ziccarelli; Valentina Bruno; Stefano Rozzi; Lorenzo Pia; Leonardo Fogassi; Francesca Garbarini
Journal:  Brain Commun       Date:  2022-02-11

6.  Bodily self-recognition in patients with pathological embodiment.

Authors:  Michela Candini; Carlotta Fossataro; Lorenzo Pia; Giuliana Vezzadini; Patrizia Gindri; Mattia Galigani; Anna Berti; Francesca Frassinetti; Francesca Garbarini
Journal:  J Neurosci Res       Date:  2022-07-22       Impact factor: 4.433

7.  Monochannel Preference in Autism Spectrum Conditions Revealed by a Non-Visual Variant of Rubber Hand Illusion.

Authors:  Mattia Galigani; Carlotta Fossataro; Patrizia Gindri; Massimiliano Conson; Francesca Garbarini
Journal:  J Autism Dev Disord       Date:  2021-09-30

8.  Motor control drives visual bodily judgements.

Authors:  Roni O Maimon-Mor; Hunter R Schone; Rani Moran; Peter Brugger; Tamar R Makin
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2020-01-13
  8 in total

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