Abstract
The left-hand advantage seen during tactile discrimination tasks suggests hemispheric-processing asymmetry, although its neural substrates are not well known. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to evaluate the laterality of the neural substrates involved in tactile discrimination in 19 normal volunteers. Passive tactile discrimination tasks, along with appropriate control tasks, were performed with both the right and left hands to evaluate the effects of the hand used and hemispheric effects (i.e., laterality of the activation pattern). Regardless of the hand used, the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, posterior parietal cortex, pre-supplementary motor area, and rostral portion of the dorsal premotor cortex (PMdr) were activated asymmetrically during tactile discrimination. This confirms the previous finding of a right-sided asymmetry for tactile shape discrimination. Hand effects were found in the left caudal portion of PMd (PMdc) adjacent to the central sulcus, which showed prominent activation during right-handed but not left-handed discrimination tasks. This asymmetric activation in the left PMdc might be related to the asymmetric interhemispheric interaction during right-handed tactile discrimination.
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