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- Laurent Auclair, Julien Barra, and Patrick Raibaut.
- Université Paris Descartes, Sorbonne Paris Cité, INSERM U663, Paris, France. laurent.auclair@parisdescartes.fr
- Neuropsychology. 2012 May 1; 26 (3): 323-33.
ObjectiveTactile localization on the skin involves both a somatotopic and a postural schema (body-schema) representation. The present study determines the extent to which body posture influences tactile perception in right-brain-damaged patients.MethodIn a first set of experiments, patients were asked to detect single tactile stimulation delivered to their left or right hands or to both hands simultaneously (double stimulation) in different arm postures. Only patients who had no difficulty localizing single and double tactile stimulations when their hands were placed in anatomic position were tested. Participant's hands were crossed, one over the other, and the tactile stimuli were delivered either to the hand (beyond the crossing point, Experiment 1) or to the forearm (before the crossing point, Experiment 2). In Experiment 3, the left hand was placed in the right hemispace and the right hand in the left hemispace without crossing over (opposite condition). In a second set of experiments, patients were asked to detect stimulation delivered to the forefinger. The fingers were crossed, one over the other at the level of the middle phalanx, and stimuli were delivered either beyond or before the crossing point.ResultsIn all experimental conditions, control participants performed at ceiling. We observed a left-hand tactile extinction on double stimulation in the crossed condition.ConclusionsThese results suggest that tactile stimuli can be encoded based on multiple specific body-part representations rather than on an integrated body-schema representation.
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