Body-specific motor imagery of hand actions: Neural evidence from right- and left-handers
Publication year
2009Number of pages
9 p.
Source
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 3, (2009), article 39ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
SW OZ DCC BO
SW OZ DCC CO
Former Organization
SW OZ NICI BO
SW OZ NICI CO
Journal title
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Volume
vol. 3
Languages used
English (eng)
Subject
Action, intention, and motor control; DI-BCB_DCC_Theme 2: Perception, Action and ControlAbstract
If motor imagery uses neural structures involved in action execution, then the neural correlates of imagining an action should differ between individuals who tend to execute the action differently. Here we report fMRI data showing that motor imagery is influenced by the way people habitually perform motor actions with their particular bodies; that is, motor imagery is ‘body-specific’ (Casasanto, 2009). During mental imagery for complex hand actions, activation of cortical areas involved in motor planning and execution was left-lateralized in right-handers but right-lateralized in left-handers. We conclude that motor imagery involves the generation of an action plan that is grounded in the participant’s motor habits, not just an abstract representation at the level of the action’s goal. People with different patterns of motor experience form correspondingly different neurocognitive representations of imagined actions.
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- Academic publications [229016]
- Electronic publications [111213]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [28689]
- Open Access publications [80090]
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