Abstract

The representation of the body in the brain is constantly updated to allow optimal sensorimotor interactions with the external world. In addition to dynamic features, body representation holds stable features that are still largely unknown. In the present work we explored the hypothesis that body parts have preferential associations with relative spatial locations. Specifically, in three experiments, we found consistent preferential associations between the index finger and the top position, and between the thumb and the bottom position. This association was found in a tactile sensory discrimination task, which was conducted both with and without vision, as well as at the implicit conceptual association level. These findings show that body parts and spatial locations are stably associated. Therefore, not only are body segments dynamically mapped in space for perception and action, but they also hold intrinsic spatial information that contributes to somatosensory spatial processing.

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