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Cited by 367 publications
(86 citation statements)
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“…Several authors have suggested that localisation errors mainly involve shifts of perceived location proximal to the actual location of touch (e.g., Critchley, 1953;Halligan et al, 1995;Rapp, Hendel, & Medina, 2002). A more complex pattern of mislocalisations, however, was reported by Denny-Brown, Meyer, and Horenstein (1952) who found in one patient that the perceived locations of touches were funnelled towards the wrist and the ankles, resulting in effective foreshortening of the upper arm and leg. Head (1918) reports several cases in which patients were clearly able to determine which finger was touched, but completely unable to indicate where on that finger they were touched.…”
Section: Localisation Of Touch On the Body Surfacementioning
confidence: 97%
“…Several authors have suggested that localisation errors mainly involve shifts of perceived location proximal to the actual location of touch (e.g., Critchley, 1953;Halligan et al, 1995;Rapp, Hendel, & Medina, 2002). A more complex pattern of mislocalisations, however, was reported by Denny-Brown, Meyer, and Horenstein (1952) who found in one patient that the perceived locations of touches were funnelled towards the wrist and the ankles, resulting in effective foreshortening of the upper arm and leg. Head (1918) reports several cases in which patients were clearly able to determine which finger was touched, but completely unable to indicate where on that finger they were touched.…”
Section: Localisation Of Touch On the Body Surfacementioning
confidence: 97%
“…[4,8]) and has recently been investigated more closely with behavioural measures (e.g. [2,21,32,36,37]).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In everyday life, multisensory interactions do not always improve but may also disturb spatial perception [1]. After unilateral brain damage (mostly right-sided), patients may fail to detect bilateral simultaneous stimuli by systematically omitting stimuli applied on the contralesional side (extinction [2]). More rarely, rather than extinguishing the contralesional stimulus, some patients may perceive the latter at an unstimulated location of the ipsilesional side (alloesthesia [3][4][5][6]).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, extinction can also occur when the stimuli on opposite sides belong to different sensory modalities (e.g. multisensory audiotactile extinction [2,3,6]). One question is thus whether corresponding cases of 'multisensory alloesthesia' could occur in order to shed light on the functional mechanisms of alloesthesia.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%