Modulation of spatial orientation processing by mental imagery instructions: A MEG study of representational momentum

被引:23
作者
Amorim, MA [1 ]
Lang, W [1 ]
Lindinger, G [1 ]
Mayer, D [1 ]
Deecke, L [1 ]
Berthoz, A [1 ]
机构
[1] Coll France, CNRS, Lab Physiol Percept & Act, F-75005 Paris, France
关键词
D O I
10.1162/089892900562345
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Under appropriate conditions, an observer's memory for the final position of an abruptly halted moving object is distorted in the direction of the represented motion. This phenomenon is called "representational momentum" (RM). We examined the effect of mental imagery instructions on the modulation of spatial orientation processing by testing for RM under conditions of picture versus body relation perception and imagination. Behavioral data were gathered via classical reaction time and error measurements, whereas brain activity was recorded with the help of magnetoencephalography (MEG). Due to the so-called inverse problem and to signal complexity, results were described at the signal level rather than with the source location modeling. Brain magnetic field strength and spatial distribution, as well as latency of P200m evoked fields were used as neurocognitive markers. A task was devised where a subject examined a rotating sea horizon as seen from a virtual boat in order to extrapolate either the picture motion or the body motion relative to the picture while the latter disappeared temporarily until a test-view was displayed as a final orientation candidate. Results suggest that perceptual interpretation and extrapolation of visual motion in the roll plane capitalize on the fronto-parietal cortical networks involving working memory processes. Extrapolation of the rotational dynamics of sea horizon revealed a RM effect simulating the role of gravity in rotational equilibrium. Modulation of the P200m component reflected spatial orientation processing and a non-voluntary detection of an incongruity between displayed and expected final orientations given the implied motion. Neuromagnetic properties of anticipatory (Contingent Magnetic Variation) and evoked (P200m) brain magnetic fields suggest, respectively, differential allocation of attentional resources by mental imagery instructions (picture vs. body tilt), and a communality of neural structures (in the right centro-parietal region) for the control of both RM and mental rotation processes. Finally, the RM of the body motion is less prone to forward shifts than that of picture motion evidencing an internalization of the implied mass of the virtual body of the observer.
引用
收藏
页码:569 / 582
页数:14
相关论文
共 47 条
[1]   Functional activation of the human brain during mental rotation [J].
Alivisatos, B ;
Petrides, M .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 1997, 35 (02) :111-118
[2]   Viewer- and object-centered mental explorations of an imagined environment are not equivalent [J].
Amorim, MA ;
Stucchi, N .
COGNITIVE BRAIN RESEARCH, 1997, 5 (03) :229-239
[3]   Reproduction of object shape is more accurate without the continued availability of visual information [J].
Amorim, MA ;
Loomis, JM ;
Fukusima, SS .
PERCEPTION, 1998, 27 (01) :69-86
[4]   Functional MRI of lateral occipitotemporal cortex during pursuit and motion perception [J].
Barton, JJS ;
Simpson, T ;
Kiriakopoulos, E ;
Stewart, C ;
Crawley, A ;
Guthrie, B ;
Wood, M ;
Mikulis, D .
ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 1996, 40 (03) :387-398
[5]   Magnetoencephalography may help to improve functional MRI brain mapping [J].
Beisteiner, R ;
Erdler, M ;
Teichtmeister, C ;
Diemling, M ;
Moser, E ;
Edward, V ;
Deecke, L .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 1997, 9 (05) :1072-1077
[6]  
BEISTENER R, 1997, FUNCTIONAL IMAGING, P409
[7]  
BERINGER J, 1994, PSYCHOL SOFTWARE NEW, V5, P37
[8]  
BERINGER J, 1994, BEHAV RES METH INSTR, V55, P1
[9]   Imaging cognition: An empirical review of PET studies with normal subjects [J].
Cabeza, R ;
Nyberg, L .
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 1997, 9 (01) :1-26
[10]   Changes in cortical activity during mental rotation - A mapping study using functional MRI [J].
Cohen, MS ;
Kosslyn, SM ;
Breiter, HC ;
DiGirolamo, GJ ;
Thompson, WL ;
Anderson, AK ;
Bookheimer, SY ;
Rosen, BR ;
Belliveau, JW .
BRAIN, 1996, 119 :89-100