Low frequency oscillations during hand laterality judgment task with and without personal perspectives: a preliminary study.

Cogn Neurodyn

Research Institute for Health Sciences and Technologies (SABITA), Clinical Electrophysiology, Neuroimaging and Neuromodulation Laboratory, Istanbul Medipol University, Istanbul, Turkey.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how personal perspective affects our perception of body images using a hand laterality judgment (HLJ) task, involving 80 visual hand stimuli presented to 11 right-handed participants.
  • Results show that participants had slower reaction times and made more errors when judging hand images from a third-person perspective compared to a first-person perspective.
  • The findings indicate a distinct difference in brain activity, with delta waves linked to self-body perception and theta waves associated with a more external perspective, suggesting different cognitive strategies for interpreting body images.

Article Abstract

Sense of personal perspective is crucial for understanding in attentional mechanisms of the perception in "self" or "other's" body. In a hand laterality judgment (HLJ) task, perception of perspective can be assessed by arranging angular orientations and depths of images. A total of 11 healthy, right-handed participants (8 females, mean age: 38.36 years, education: 14 years) were included in the study. The purpose of this study was to investigate behavioural and cortical responses in low-frequency cortical rhythms during a HLJ task. A total of 80-visual hand stimuli were presented through the experiment. Hand visuals were categorized in the way of side (right vs. left) and perspective (1st vs. 3rd personal perspective). Both behavioural outcomes and brain oscillatory characteristics (i.e., frequency and amplitude) of the Electroencephalography were analysed. All reaction time and incorrect answers for 3rd person perspective were higher than the ones for 1st person perspective. Location effect was statistically significant in event-related theta responses confirming the dominant activity of theta frequency in spatial memory tasks on parietal and occipital areas. In addition, we found there were increasing in delta power and phase in hand visuals with 1st person perspective and increasing theta phase in hand visuals with 3rd person perspective ( < 0.05). Accordingly, a clear dissociation in the perception of perspectives in low-frequency bands was revealed. These different cortical strategy in the perception of hand visual with and without perspectives may be interpreted as delta activity may be related in self-body perception, whereas theta activity may be related in allocentric perception.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10640502PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11571-023-09974-8DOI Listing

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