2 results match your criteria: "France. berangere.thirioux@college-de-france.fr[Affiliation]"

Substantial data from the cognitive neurosciences point to the importance of bodily processing for the development of a comprehensive theory of the self. A key aspect of the bodily self is self-location, the experience that the self is localized at a specific position in space within one's bodily borders (embodied self-location). Although the neural mechanisms of self-location have been studied by manipulating the spatial location of one's visual perspective during mental imagery, such experiments were conducted in constrained, explicit, and unecological contexts such as explicit instructions in a prone/seated position, although most human interactions occur spontaneously while standing/walking.

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Walking on a line: a motor paradigm using rotation and reflection symmetry to study mental body transformations.

Brain Cogn

July 2009

Laboratoire de Physiologie de la Perception et de l'Action, Collège de France, France; Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris, France.

Researchers have recently reintroduced the own-body in the center of the social interaction theory. From the discovery of the mirror neurons in the ventral premotor cortex of the monkey's brain, a human embodied model of interindividual relationship based on simulation processes has been advanced, according to which we tend to embody spontaneously the other individuals' behavior when interacting. Although the neurocognitive mechanisms of the embodiment process have started being described, the mechanisms of self-location during embodiment are still less known.

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