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    In (or outside of) your neck of the woods: laterality in spatial body representation

    Hach, Sylvia; Schuetz-Bosbach, Simone

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    Hach_SchuetzBosbach2014.pdf (736.4Kb)
    Date
    2014-02-19
    Citation:
    Hach, S., and Schuetz-Bosbach, S. (2014). In (or outside of) your neck of the woods: laterality in spatial body representation. Frontiers in Psychology, 19/5, pp.123-134. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00123
    Permanent link to Research Bank record:
    https://hdl.handle.net/10652/3050
    Abstract
    Beside language, space is to date the most widely recognized lateralized systems. For example, it has been shown that even mental representations of space and the spatial representation of abstract concepts display lateralized characteristics. For the most part, this body of literature describes space as distal or something outside of the observer or actor. What has been strangely absent in the literature on the whole and specifically in the spatial literature until recently is the most proximal space imaginable – the body. In this review, we will summarize three strands of literature showing laterality in body representations. First, evidence of hemispheric asymmetries in body space in health and, second in body space in disease will be examined. Third, studies pointing to differential contributions of the right and left hemisphere to illusory body (space) will be summarized. Together these studies show hemispheric asymmetries to be evident in body representations at the level of simple somatosensory and proprioceptive representations. We propose a novel working hypothesis, whereby neural systems dedicated to processing action-oriented information about one’s own body space may ontogenetically serve as a template for the perception of the external world
    Keywords:
    left–right handedness, lateralization, personal space, body representation, somatosensation
    ANZSRC Field of Research:
    170112 Sensory Processes, Perception and Performance
    Available Online at:
    http://www.memorylab.org/Files/2014_Hach_Frontpsych.pdf
    Rights:
    This digital work is protected by copyright. It may be consulted by you, provided you comply with the provisions of the Act and the following conditions of use: Any use you make of these documents or images must be for research or private study purposes only, and you may not make them available to any other person. You will recognise the author's and publishers rights and give due acknowledgement where appropriate.
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