Cortical activity and egocentric representation: An fMRI study




Objective


Subjects use different referentials for spatial localization, and the egocentric references are very often impaired especially during stroke. The objective is to find the difference between activations induced by 2 egocentric tasks


Material/Patients and methods


Seventeen right-handed healthy subjects (50.4 ± 14.9 years) were tested using fMRI during the realization of 2 egocentric spatial tasks: the perception of the straight ahead (retinocentric) and the longitudinal axis of the body (centered by the trunk).


Results


For both tasks, cerebral activations dominated largely in the right hemisphere and interest essentially the right frontoparietal network. However, the straight ahead task showed more specific activations in insular and thalamic areas.


Discussion – Conclusion


The activations areas found for the 2 egocentric tasks are superimposed with a predominance in right frontotemporal-parietal network, however, the straight ahead task activates quite specifically regions that are closed to the areas usually activated for allocentric tasks, which suggests a continuum between spatial perception in personal trunk centered egocentric referential, retinotopic extrapersonal retinocentric egocentric referential and allocentric referential.


Disclosure of interest


The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

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Apr 20, 2017 | Posted by in PHYSICAL MEDICINE & REHABILITATION | Comments Off on Cortical activity and egocentric representation: An fMRI study

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