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The neural basis of egocentric and allocentric coding of space in humans: a functional magnetic resonance study
Authors:Gaspare Galati  Elie Lobel  Giuseppe Vallar  Alain Berthoz  Luigi Pizzamiglio  Denis Le Bihan
Institution:Laboratory of Neuropsychology, Fondazione Santa Lucia, Roma, Italy.
Abstract:The spatial location of an object can be represented in the brain with respect to different classes of reference frames, either relative to or independent of the subject's position. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to identify regions of the healthy human brain subserving mainly egocentric or allocentric (object-based) coordinates by asking subjects to judge the location of a visual stimulus with respect to either their body or an object. A color-judgement task, matched for stimuli, difficulty, motor and oculomotor responses, was used as a control. We identified a bilateral, though mainly right-hemisphere based, fronto-parietal network involved in egocentric processing. A subset of these regions, including a much less extensive unilateral, right fronto-parietal network, was found to be active during object-based processing. The right-hemisphere lateralization and the partial superposition of the egocentric and the object-based networks is discussed in the light of neuropsychological findings in brain-damaged patients with unilateral spatial neglect and of neurophysiological studies in the monkey.
Keywords:Spatial reference frames Mid-sagittal plane Object-based Spatial Hemineglect Right hemisphere
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