Frequency-tagging EEG reveals spontaneous categorical discrimination of visual self-identity

IF 4.1 2区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
Mattia Galigani , Nicolò Castellani , Barbara Italia , Sveva D’Aversa , Davide Bottari , Francesca Garbarini
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

From early development, visual and sensorimotor representations of our hands are continually linked, allowing to develop a bodily self-representation. Here, we investigated the neural mechanisms of bodily self-identity discrimination, combining electroencephalography with fast periodic visual stimulation. In two experiments, participants’ self-hand images appeared as oddball stimuli among others’ hands. To control for statistical regularity and familiarity, oddball hand images could belong to a stranger (Exp1) or the partner (Exp2). In a third behavioral experiment, we verified participants could explicitly detect the presence of the self-hand in the sequence. Results revealed a neural marker for automatic hand identity discrimination, with greater responses in egocentric than allocentric perspective only for self-hand images. This interaction effect emerged over occipital, consistently with the visual nature of the task, and also over fronto-central regions, compatibly with the involvement of a sensorimotor network. These findings support that self-hand processing relies on associating visual and sensorimotor representations.

Abstract Image

频率标记脑电图揭示了自发的视觉自我认同分类歧视
从早期发育开始,我们的手的视觉和感觉运动表征就不断地联系在一起,从而发展出身体上的自我表征。本研究采用脑电图和快速周期视觉刺激相结合的方法,研究了身体自我身份识别的神经机制。在两个实验中,参与者自己的手图像在其他人的手中显得很奇怪。为了控制统计规律性和熟悉度,奇怪的手图像可能属于陌生人(Exp1)或伴侣(Exp2)。在第三个行为实验中,我们验证了参与者可以明确地检测到序列中自我手的存在。结果表明,手的自动识别存在一个神经标记,自我中心视角下的反应大于非中心视角下的反应。这种互动效应出现在枕部,与任务的视觉性质一致,也出现在额中央区域,与感觉运动网络的参与一致。这些发现支持了自手加工依赖于视觉和感觉运动表征的关联。
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来源期刊
iScience
iScience Multidisciplinary-Multidisciplinary
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
1.70%
发文量
1972
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊介绍: Science has many big remaining questions. To address them, we will need to work collaboratively and across disciplines. The goal of iScience is to help fuel that type of interdisciplinary thinking. iScience is a new open-access journal from Cell Press that provides a platform for original research in the life, physical, and earth sciences. The primary criterion for publication in iScience is a significant contribution to a relevant field combined with robust results and underlying methodology. The advances appearing in iScience include both fundamental and applied investigations across this interdisciplinary range of topic areas. To support transparency in scientific investigation, we are happy to consider replication studies and papers that describe negative results. We know you want your work to be published quickly and to be widely visible within your community and beyond. With the strong international reputation of Cell Press behind it, publication in iScience will help your work garner the attention and recognition it merits. Like all Cell Press journals, iScience prioritizes rapid publication. Our editorial team pays special attention to high-quality author service and to efficient, clear-cut decisions based on the information available within the manuscript. iScience taps into the expertise across Cell Press journals and selected partners to inform our editorial decisions and help publish your science in a timely and seamless way.
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