The body in the brain revisited

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 200 - Trang 25-35 - 2009
Giovanni Berlucchi1,2, Salvatore M. Aglioti3
1National Institute of Neuroscience-Italy, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
2Department of Neural and Visual Sciences, Physiology Section, University of Verona, Verona, Italy
3Department of Psychology and Study Center for Mental Functions, La Sapienza University of Rome and Santa Lucia Foundation, IRCCS, Rome, Italy

Tóm tắt

Corporeal awareness is a difficult concept which refers to perception, knowledge and evaluation of one’s own body as well as of other bodies. We discuss here some controversies regarding the significance of the concepts of body schema and body image, as variously entertained by different authors, for the understanding of corporeal awareness, and consider some newly proposed alternatives. We describe some recent discoveries of cortical areas specialized for the processing of bodily forms and bodily actions, as revealed by neuroimaging, neurophysiological, and lesion studies. We further describe new empirical and theoretical evidence for the importance of interoception, in addition to exteroception and proprioception, for corporeal awareness, and discuss how itch, a typical interoceptive input, has been wrongly excluded from the classic concept of the proprioceptive–tactile body schema. Finally, we consider the role of the insular cortex as the terminal cortical station of interoception and other bodily signals, along with Craig’s proposal that the human insular cortex sets our species apart from other species by supporting consciousness of the body and the self. We conclude that corporeal awareness depends on the spatiotemporally distributed activity of many bodies in the brain, none of which is isomorphic with the actual body.

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