Spatial hyperschematia without spatial neglect after insulo-thalamic disconnection.

PLoS One

Department of Neurology, University Hospital of Geneva and Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland ; Laboratory for Neurology and Imaging of Cognition, Department of Fundamental Neurosciences, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.

Published: October 2014

Different spatial representations are not stored as a single multipurpose map in the brain. Right brain-damaged patients can show a distortion, a compression of peripersonal and extrapersonal space. Here we report the case of a patient with a right insulo-thalamic disconnection without spatial neglect. The patient, compared with 10 healthy control subjects, showed a constant and reliable increase of her peripersonal and extrapersonal egocentric space representations - that we named spatial hyperschematia - yet left her allocentric space representations intact. This striking dissociation shows that our interactions with the surrounding world are represented and processed modularly in the human brain, depending on their frame of reference.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3841154PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0079938PLOS

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