Authors
Daniele Romano, Martina Gandola, Gabriella Bottini, Angelo Maravita
Publication date
2014/4/1
Journal
Brain
Volume
137
Issue
4
Pages
1213-1223
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
A complex brain representation of our body allows us to monitor incoming sensory stimuli and plan actions towards the external world. A critical element of such a complex representation is the sense of ownership towards our own body parts. Brain damage may disrupt this representation, leading to the striking neuropsychological condition called somatoparaphrenia, that is, the delusion that one’s own limbs belong to someone else. The clinical features characterizing somatoparaphrenia are well known, however, physiological clues of the level at which this condition may disrupt sensory functions are unknown. In the present study we investigated this issue by measuring the anticipatory skin conductance response to noxious stimuli approaching either the affected or the intact body side in a group of patients with somatoparaphrenia (n = 5; three females, age range = 66–84), and in a group of patients with …
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