Abstract

Brain regions in the intraparietal and the premotor cortices selectively process visual and multisensory events near the hands (peri-hand space). Visual information from the hand itself modulates this processing potentially because it is used to estimate the location of one’s own body and the surrounding space. In humans specific occipitotemporal areas process visual information of specific body parts such as hands. Here we used an fMRI block-design to investigate if anterior intraparietal and ventral premotor ‘peri-hand areas’ exhibit selective responses to viewing images of hands and viewing specific hand orientations. Furthermore, we investigated if the occipitotemporal ‘hand area’ is sensitive to viewed hand orientation. Our findings demonstrate increased BOLD responses in the left anterior intraparietal area when participants viewed hands and feet as compared to faces and objects. Anterior intraparietal and also occipitotemporal areas in the left hemisphere exhibited response preferences for viewing right hands with orientations commonly viewed for one’s own hand as compared to uncommon own hand orientations. Our results indicate that both anterior intraparietal and occipitotemporal areas encode visual limb-specific shape and orientation information.

Highlights

  • Behavioural experiments have consistently provided evidence that viewing the body modulates a multitude of important processes for human beings

  • We found significantly increased responses to common hand orientations viewed for one’s own right hand in anterior intraparietal and in occipitotemporal areas in the left hemisphere

  • Experiment 1 The three-way analyses of variance (ANOVA) comprising the factors regions of interest (ROIs), stimulus category and hemisphere resulted in a significant main effect of stimulus category (F[3,57] = 2.99, p = .039)

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Summary

Introduction

Behavioural experiments have consistently provided evidence that viewing the body modulates a multitude of important processes for human beings. Neuroimaging studies have identified occipitotemporal, fusiform as well as parietooccipital (posterior intraparietal sulcus, V3A, V7) areas in the human brain which specialize in visual processing of human bodies [10,11] (see [12,13] for reviews). Activity in these areas is significantly greater when participants view images of bodies or body-parts as compared to a wide range of other visual stimulus categories such as faces and objects. Body-part specific representations, for example of the human hand, have been shown to be dissociable from other body-parts [14,15]

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