Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 4 de 4
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Front Syst Neurosci ; 15: 791520, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35002644

ABSTRACT

This study reconsiders behavioral and functional data from studies investigating the anatomical imitation (AI) and the related mental rotation (MR) competence, carried out by our group in healthy subjects, with intact interhemispheric connections, and in split-brain patients, completely or partially lacking callosal connections. The results strongly point to the conclusion that AI and MR competence requires interhemispheric communication, mainly occurring through the corpus callosum, which is the largest white matter structure in the human brain. The results are discussed in light of previous studies and of future implications.

2.
Physiol Behav ; 151: 221-9, 2015 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26220466

ABSTRACT

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used for revealing activations in the human brain by lateralized tactile-gustatory stimulations of the tongue. Salt, a basic taste stimulus, and water, now recognized as an independent taste modality, were applied to either hemitongues with pads similar to the taste strips test for the clinical psychophysical evaluation of taste. With both stimuli, the observed cortical patterns of activations could be attributed to a combined somatosensory and gustatory stimulation of the tongue, with no significant differences between salt and water. Stimulation of each hemitongue evoked a bilateral activation of the anterior insula-frontal operculum, ascribable to the gustatory component of the stimulation, and a bilateral activation of the inferior part of the postcentral gyrus, ascribable to the tactile component of the stimulation. The results are in line with the notion that the representation of the tongue in the cerebral hemispheres in both the touch and the taste modalities is bilateral. Clinical and brain stimulation findings indicate that this bilaterality depends primarily on a partial crossing of the afferent pathways, perhaps with a predominance of the crossed pathway in the touch modality and the uncrossed pathway in the taste modality. Previous evidence suggests that the corpus callosum is not indispensible for this bilateral representation, but can contribute to it by interhemispheric transfer of information in both modalities.


Subject(s)
Brain/physiology , Taste Perception/physiology , Tongue/physiology , Touch Perception/physiology , Adult , Brain Mapping , Drinking Water/administration & dosage , Female , Functional Laterality/physiology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Physical Stimulation , Sodium, Dietary/administration & dosage , Young Adult
3.
World J Radiol ; 6(12): 895-906, 2014 Dec 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25550994

ABSTRACT

This short review examines the most recent functional studies of the topographic organization of the human corpus callosum, the main interhemispheric commissure. After a brief description of its anatomy, development, microstructure, and function, it examines and discusses the latest findings obtained using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and tractography (DTT) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), three recently developed imaging techniques that have significantly expanded and refined our knowledge of the commissure. While DTI and DTT have been providing insights into its microstructure, integrity and level of myelination, fMRI has been the key technique in documenting the activation of white matter fibers, particularly in the corpus callosum. By combining DTT and fMRI it has been possible to describe the trajectory of the callosal fibers interconnecting the primary olfactory, gustatory, motor, somatic sensory, auditory and visual cortices at sites where the activation elicited by peripheral stimulation was detected by fMRI. These studies have demonstrated the presence of callosal fiber tracts that cross the commissure at the level of the genu, body, and splenium, at sites showing fMRI activation. Altogether such findings lend further support to the notion that the corpus callosum displays a functional topographic organization that can be explored with fMRI.

4.
Neuropsychologia ; 48(6): 1664-9, 2010 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20167229

ABSTRACT

Two callosotomized patients and 24 neurologically normal subjects performed simple binary discriminations between upright letters flashed in one or other visual field. Where discrimination of the letters F and R by name either showed a left-hemisphere advantage or no hemispheric effect, discrimination of whether the same letters were normal or backward showed a right-hemisphere advantage. These results suggest that discrimination of mirror-image letters depends on matching to an exemplar, for which the right-hemisphere is dominant, while letter naming depends on abstract category recognition. One commissurotomized patient, DDV, showed systematic left-right reversal of the letters in the left visual field, classifying the normal letters as reversed and reversed ones as normal, and persisted with this reversal when the letters were shown in free vision. This suggests that reversed exemplars of the letters may be laid down the right cerebral hemisphere. There was no such reversal in the other patient (DDC).


Subject(s)
Corpus Callosum/physiopathology , Discrimination Learning/physiology , Imagination/physiology , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Visual Fields/physiology , Adult , Corpus Callosum/surgery , Decision Making/physiology , Epilepsy/physiopathology , Epilepsy/surgery , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Photic Stimulation/methods , Young Adult
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...