Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to compare the neural correlates of three different types of spatial coding, which are implicated in crucial cognitive functions of our everyday life, such as visuomotor coordination and orientation in topographical space. By manipulating the requested spatial reference during a task of relative distance estimation, we directly compared viewer-centered, object-centered, and landmark-centered spatial coding of the same realistic 3-D information. Common activation was found in bilateral parietal, occipital, and right frontal premotor regions. The retrosplenial and ventromedial occipital-temporal cortex (and parts of the parietal and occipital cortex) were significantly more activated during the landmark-centered condition. The ventrolateral occipital-temporal cortex was particularly involved in object-centered coding. Results strongly demonstrate that viewer-centered (egocentric) coding is restricted to the dorsal stream and connected frontal regions, whereas a coding centered on external references requires both dorsal and ventral regions, depending on the reference being a movable object or a landmark.

Reference frames for spatial cognition: Different brain areas are involved in viewer-, object-, and landmark-centered judgments about object location / Giorgia, Committeri; Galati, Gaspare; Anne Lise, Paradis; Pizzamiglio, Luigi Remo; Alain, Berthoz; Denis, Lebihan. - In: JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE. - ISSN 0898-929X. - STAMPA. - 16:9(2004), pp. 1517-1535. [10.1162/0898929042568550]

Reference frames for spatial cognition: Different brain areas are involved in viewer-, object-, and landmark-centered judgments about object location

GALATI, Gaspare;PIZZAMIGLIO, Luigi Remo;
2004

Abstract

Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to compare the neural correlates of three different types of spatial coding, which are implicated in crucial cognitive functions of our everyday life, such as visuomotor coordination and orientation in topographical space. By manipulating the requested spatial reference during a task of relative distance estimation, we directly compared viewer-centered, object-centered, and landmark-centered spatial coding of the same realistic 3-D information. Common activation was found in bilateral parietal, occipital, and right frontal premotor regions. The retrosplenial and ventromedial occipital-temporal cortex (and parts of the parietal and occipital cortex) were significantly more activated during the landmark-centered condition. The ventrolateral occipital-temporal cortex was particularly involved in object-centered coding. Results strongly demonstrate that viewer-centered (egocentric) coding is restricted to the dorsal stream and connected frontal regions, whereas a coding centered on external references requires both dorsal and ventral regions, depending on the reference being a movable object or a landmark.
2004
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Reference frames for spatial cognition: Different brain areas are involved in viewer-, object-, and landmark-centered judgments about object location / Giorgia, Committeri; Galati, Gaspare; Anne Lise, Paradis; Pizzamiglio, Luigi Remo; Alain, Berthoz; Denis, Lebihan. - In: JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE. - ISSN 0898-929X. - STAMPA. - 16:9(2004), pp. 1517-1535. [10.1162/0898929042568550]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/240435
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