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Body representations in the human brain revealed by kinesthetic illusions and their essential contributions to motor control and corporeal awareness

Journal

NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH
Volume 104, Issue -, Pages 16-30

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neures.2015.10.013

Keywords

Muscle spindle; Kinesthesia; Body representation; Motor control; Sensory-motor association; Corporeal awareness; Self-consciousness; Functional magnetic resonance imaging

Categories

Funding

  1. Scientific Research on Innovative Areas Understanding brain plasticity on body representations to promote their adaptive functions (JSPS KAKENHI) [26120003]
  2. [24000012]
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15K21138, 24000012, 26120003] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The human brain can generate a continuously changing postural model of our body. Somatic (proprioceptive) signals from skeletal muscles and joints contribute to the formation of the body representation. Recent neuroimaging studies of proprioceptive bodily illusions have elucidated the importance of three brain systems (motor network, specialized parietal systems, right inferior fronto-parietal network) in the formation of the human body representation. The motor network, especially the primary motor cortex, processes afferent input from skeletal muscles. Such information may contribute to the formation of kinematic/dynamic postural models of limbs, thereby enabling fast online feedback control. Distinct parietal regions appear to play specialized roles in the transformation/integration of information across different coordinate systems, which may subserve the adaptability and flexibility of the body representation. Finally, the right inferior fronto-parietal network, connected by the inferior branch of the superior longitudinal fasciculus, is consistently recruited when an individual experiences various types of bodily illusions and its possible roles relate to corporeal awareness, which is likely elicited through a series of neuronal processes of monitoring and accumulating bodily information and updating the body representation. Because this network is also recruited when identifying one's own features, the network activity could be a neuronal basis for self-consciousness. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd and the Japan Neuroscience Society. All rights reserved.

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