2010
DOI: 10.1007/s10548-010-0138-x
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Mental Imagery for Full and Upper Human Bodies: Common Right Hemisphere Activations and Distinct Extrastriate Activations

Abstract: The processing of human bodies is important in social life and for the recognition of another person's actions, moods, and intentions. Recent neuroimaging studies on mental imagery of human body parts suggest that the left hemisphere is dominant in body processing. However, studies on mental imagery of full human bodies reported stronger right hemisphere or bilateral activations. Here, we measured functional magnetic resonance imaging during mental imagery of bilateral partial (upper) and full bodies. Results … Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(18 citation statements)
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References 99 publications
(160 reference statements)
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“…In addition, we find activation in a fronto-parietal network specific for angry person imagery. The activations show that visual imagery of a person activates similar brain regions as when normal subjects with intact V1 imagine a person, as evidenced by the results in the control subjects as well as by previous studies (Blanke, Ionta, Fornari, Mohr, & Maeder, 2010;Bonda, Petrides, Frey, & Evans, 1995;Zacks, Rypma, Gabrieli, Tversky, & Glover, 1999;Zacks, Ollinger, Sheridan, & Tversky, 2002). These activations include premotor cortex (PMC), medial parietal cortex, early extrastriate visual cortex and caudate nucleus.…”
Section: Neural Correlates Of Imagerysupporting
confidence: 73%
“…In addition, we find activation in a fronto-parietal network specific for angry person imagery. The activations show that visual imagery of a person activates similar brain regions as when normal subjects with intact V1 imagine a person, as evidenced by the results in the control subjects as well as by previous studies (Blanke, Ionta, Fornari, Mohr, & Maeder, 2010;Bonda, Petrides, Frey, & Evans, 1995;Zacks, Rypma, Gabrieli, Tversky, & Glover, 1999;Zacks, Ollinger, Sheridan, & Tversky, 2002). These activations include premotor cortex (PMC), medial parietal cortex, early extrastriate visual cortex and caudate nucleus.…”
Section: Neural Correlates Of Imagerysupporting
confidence: 73%
“…Based on the possibility to further investigate such covert stages, it has been demonstrated that mental simulation of movements relies on partially overlapping brain network with respect to real execution (e.g. Ionta et al, 2010) and that sensorimotor versus visual mechanisms are selectively activated by mental spatial transformations of bodily images (Blanke et al, 2010). Building on this evidence, a recent study showed a better efficacy of a BCI session that couples brain activity (mental simulation of manual actions) and visual feedback (the same actions performed by a virtual hand) (Pichiorri et al, 2013).…”
Section: Invasive and Non-invasive Bmismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To test this hypothesis, we used an own-body transformation task as a well-established paradigm to measure spatial perspective taking (Arzy, Thut, Mohr, Michel, & Blanke, 2006;Blanke, Ionta, Fornari, Mohr, & Maeder, 2010;Blanke et al, 2005;Mohr, Blanke, & Brugger, 2006;Parsons, 1987;Tadi, Overney, & Blanke, 2009). 1 In this task participants are required to make laterality judgments regarding the handedness of a marked hand of an avatar presented at different angular disparities.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%