4.6 Article

My Hand or Yours? Markedly Different Sensitivity to Egocentric and Allocentric Views in the Hand Laterality Task

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 6, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0023316

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In the hand laterality task participants judge the handedness of visually presented stimuli - images of hands shown in a variety of postures and views - and indicate whether they perceive a right or left hand. The task engages kinaesthetic and sensorimotor processes and is considered a standard example of motor imagery. However, in this study we find that while motor imagery holds across egocentric views of the stimuli (where the hands are likely to be one's own), it does not appear to hold across allocentric views (where the hands are likely to be another person's). First, we find that psychophysical sensitivity, d', is clearly demarcated between egocentric and allocentric views, being high for the former and low for the latter. Secondly, using mixed effects methods to analyse the chronometric data, we find high positive correlation between response times across egocentric views, suggesting a common use of motor imagery across these views. Correlations are, however, considerably lower between egocentric and allocentric views, suggesting a switch from motor imagery across these perspectives. We relate these findings to research showing that the extrastriate body area discriminates egocentric ('self') and allocentric ('other') views of the human body and of body parts, including hands.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Holistic word processing in dyslexia

Aisling Conway, Nuala Brady, Karuna Misra

PLOS ONE (2017)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Reaching back: the relative strength of the retroactive emotional attentional blink

Aine Ni Choisdealbha, Richard M. Piech, John K. Fuller, David H. Zald

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS (2017)

Article Behavioral Sciences

Understanding the mechanisms of familiar voice-identity recognition in the human brain

Corrina Maguinness, Claudia Roswandowitz, Katharina von Kriegstein

NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA (2018)

Article Neurosciences

Dorsal-movement and ventral-form regions are functionally connected during visual-speech recognition

Kamila Borowiak, Corrina Maguinness, Katharina von Kriegstein

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING (2020)

Article Green & Sustainable Science & Technology

Experimental evidence for the effects of emissions charges and efficiency information on consumer car choices

Aine Ni Choisdealbha, Shane Timmons, Peter D. Lunn

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION (2020)

Article Neurosciences

Self-reported outcomes and patterns of service engagement after an acquired brain injury: a long-term follow-up study

Deirdre M. Twomey, Niamh Allen, Maria L. F. Agan, Aoife M. Hayes, Andrea Higgins, Simone Carton, Richard Roche, David Hevey, Jessica Bramham, Nuala Brady, Fiadhnait O'Keeffe

Summary: The study showed that survivors of moderate-to-severe acquired brain injury made minimal progress in activities of daily living and service engagement over seven years, with the majority requiring ongoing treatment and support services.

BRAIN INJURY (2021)

Article Neurosciences

Delta- and theta-band cortical tracking and phase-amplitude coupling to sung speech by infants

Adam Attaheri, Aine Ni Choisdealbha, Giovanni M. Di Liberto, Sinead Rocha, Perrine Brusini, Natasha Mead, Helen Olawole-Scott, Panagiotis Boutris, Samuel Gibbon, Isabel Williams, Christina Grey, Sheila Flanagan, Usha Goswami

Summary: The amplitude envelope of speech and low-frequency acoustic information are crucial for linguistic decoding, and the processing of natural language aids in brain development. Studying infant brain electrical signals can provide insights into their cognition and acquisition of speech.

NEUROIMAGE (2022)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Holistic processing of faces and words predicts reading accuracy and speed in dyslexic readers

Nuala Brady, Kate Darmody, Fiona N. Newell, Sarah M. Cooney

Summary: This study compared the performance of dyslexic and typical readers on tasks measuring holistic face processing and holistic word processing. The results showed that dyslexic readers exhibited greater holistic processing of words than typical readers, while face processing abilities were similar. Additionally, the study found that more holistic processing in both tasks predicted higher accuracy and speed for dyslexic readers, but lower accuracy for typical readers in word reading.

PLOS ONE (2021)

Article Psychology, Biological

Feelings first? Sex differences in affective and cognitive processes in emotion recognition

Judith Bek, Bronagh Donahoe, Nuala Brady

Summary: The study shows that females are faster and more accurate in recognizing dynamic emotions compared to males, indicating that rapid processing of dynamic emotional expressions is strongly influenced by sex.

QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY (2022)

Article Neurosciences

Mental rotation of hands and objects in ageing and Parkinson's disease: differentiating motor imagery and visuospatial ability

Judith Bek, Stacey Humphries, Ellen Poliakoff, Nuala Brady

Summary: Motor imagery is a useful strategy for motor learning and performance, but it may be affected by ageing and neurodegeneration. This study found that older adults and individuals with Parkinson's disease showed poorer performance on a hand laterality task, particularly when judging laterality from the back view. These findings have implications for the use of motor imagery in rehabilitation protocols.

EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH (2022)

Article Business

Green and Simple: Disclosures on Eco-labels Interact with Situational Constraints in Consumer Choice

Aine Ni Choisdealbha, P. D. Lunn

JOURNAL OF CONSUMER POLICY (2020)

Article Psychology, Applied

The Surplus Identification Task and Limits to Multiattribute Consumer Choice

Peter D. Lunn, Marek Bohacek, Feidhlim P. McGowan, Aine Ni Choisdealbha

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-APPLIED (2020)

Article Psychology, Experimental

Cross-modal processing of voices and faces in developmental prosopagnosia and developmental phonagnosia

Corrina Maguinness, Katharina von Kriegstein

VISUAL COGNITION (2017)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Event-Related Potentials Discriminate Familiar and Unusual Goal Outcomes in 5-month-Olds and Adults

Christine Michel, Aine Ni Choisdealbha, Katharina Kaduk, Vincent M. Reid

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY (2017)

Article Psychology, Developmental

Dissociating associative and motor aspects of action understanding: Processing of dual-ended tools by 16-month-old infants

Aine Ni Choisdealbha, Gert Westermann, Kirsty Dunn, Vincent Reid

BRITISH JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY (2016)

No Data Available