نتایج جستجو برای: hand mirror cell

تعداد نتایج: 1938125  

Journal: :Archives of neurology 2009
Vilayanur S Ramachandran David Brang

BACKGROUND After amputation of a limb, the majority of patients experience phantom sensations, such as phantom pain. Such patients provide an opportunity for the exploration of the perceptual correlates of recently discovered "mirror neurons," which fire not only when individuals move their own limb but when they watch the movements of the corresponding limb of another person. Similar neurons e...

Journal: :Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences 2012
Erica A Cartmill Sian Beilock Susan Goldin-Meadow

The movements we make with our hands both reflect our mental processes and help to shape them. Our actions and gestures can affect our mental representations of actions and objects. In this paper, we explore the relationship between action, gesture and thought in both humans and non-human primates and discuss its role in the evolution of language. Human gesture (specifically representational ge...

2015
James Lackner Elizaveta Khlestova

The present study investigated motor adaptation of point-to-point reaching movements to mirror feedback in the sagittal plane. This is a novel paradigm that both displaces and inverts the visual feedback of the right hand, showing it as the left hand. This environment creates a conflict between proprioceptive (and somatosensory) and visual feedback through the direction of errors produced as th...

2017
Sunil Gaba Naveen John Sandeep Bhogesha Onkar Singh Guru Karna Vemula

Mirror hand or ulnar dimelia is a very rare congenital anomaly characterized by symmetric duplication of the upper limb in the midline. In most cases there is mirrored symmetry with a central digit and 3 digits on either side representing the middle ring and small fingers. The thumb is absent despite presence of seven digits. There is duplication of ulna and absence of radius. The preaxial ulna...

Journal: :Social cognitive and affective neuroscience 2014
Oriana R Aragón Elizabeth A Sharer John A Bargh Jaime A Pineda

Mirroring neurons fire both when an individual moves and observes another move in kind. This simulation of others' movements is thought to effortlessly and ubiquitously support empathetic connection and social understanding. However, at times this could be maladaptive. How could a boxer mirror a losing opponent's expressions of fatigue, feeling his weariness, precisely when strength is required...

Journal: :Brain research. Cognitive brain research 2005
Lindsay M Oberman Edward M Hubbard Joseph P McCleery Eric L Altschuler Vilayanur S Ramachandran Jaime A Pineda

Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are largely characterized by deficits in imitation, pragmatic language, theory of mind, and empathy. Previous research has suggested that a dysfunctional mirror neuron system may explain the pathology observed in ASD. Because EEG oscillations in the mu frequency (8-13 Hz) over sensorimotor cortex are thought to reflect mirror neuron activity, one method for testi...

2012
Michael Schaefer Hans-Jochen Heinze Michael Rotte

BACKGROUND An increasing body of evidence has demonstrated that in contrast to the classic understanding the primary somatosensory cortex (SI) reflects merely seen touch (in the absence of any real touch on the own body). Based on these results it has been discussed that SI may play a role in understanding touch seen on other bodies. In order to further examine this understanding of observed to...

Journal: :Consciousness and cognition 2015
Jared Medina Priya Khurana H Branch Coslett

We examined the relationship between subcomponents of embodiment and multisensory integration using a mirror box illusion. The participants' left hand was positioned against the mirror, while their right hidden hand was positioned 12″, 6″, or 0″ from the mirror - creating a conflict between visual and proprioceptive estimates of limb position in some conditions. After synchronous tapping, async...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2004
Daniela Balslev Lars O D Christensen Ji-Hang Lee Ian Law Olaf B Paulson R Christopher Miall

When performing visually guided actions under conditions of perturbed visual feedback, e.g., in a mirror or a video camera, there is a spatial conflict between visual and proprioceptive information. Recent studies have shown that subjects without proprioception avoid this conflict and show a performance benefit. In this study, we tested whether deafferentation induced by repetitive transcranial...

Journal: :فصلنامه علمی پژوهشی پژوهشهای قرآنی 0
حسن حکیم باشی

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