Vision and touch through the looking glass in a case of crossmodal extinction

Citation
A. Maravita et al., Vision and touch through the looking glass in a case of crossmodal extinction, NEUROREPORT, 11(16), 2000, pp. 3521-3526
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences & Behavoir
Journal title
NEUROREPORT
ISSN journal
09594965 → ACNP
Volume
11
Issue
16
Year of publication
2000
Pages
3521 - 3526
Database
ISI
SICI code
0959-4965(20001109)11:16<3521:VATTTL>2.0.ZU;2-L
Abstract
When observing ourselves in a mirror, we see our body and adjacent objects (e.g, a comb or razor) projecting the image of distant objects. Are these r ecoded by the brain as reflecting stimuli in peripersonal space? To address this, we exploited the neuropsychological phenomenon of crossmodal, visual -tactile extinction, as shown by patient BV following right-hemisphere stro ke. In such crossmodal extinction, a right visual event impairs the percept ion of a simultaneous left tactile event. In BV, the right visual stimulus (an LED flash) induced more extinction of touch on the contralesional left hand when presented near the ipsilesional right hand, than when distant fro m it. This agrees with previous data in patients and monkeys showing that v isual-tactile interactions are strongest within peripersonal space. Crucial ly, we also found that an ipsilesional flash produced more extinction when observed as the distant mirror-reflection of an LED that lay close to the i psilesional hand, rather than as a distant LED flash projecting an equivale nt visual image directly. This suggests that in BV, seeing his own hand via a mirror activates a representation of peripersonal space around that hand , not of the extrapersonal space suggested by the distant visual image in t he mirror. We discuss the possible neural basis of interpreting mirror refl ections. NeuroReport 11:3521-3526 (C) 2000 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.