Body size perception in stroke patients with paresis.

Recent studies have suggested that people's intent and ability to act also can influence their perception of their bodies' peripersonal space. Vice versa one could assume that the inability to reach toward and grasp an object might have an impact on the subject's perception of reachin...

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Main Authors: Azam Shahvaroughi-Farahani, Sally A Linkenauger, Betty J Mohler, Simone C Behrens, Katrin E Giel, Hans-Otto Karnath
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252596
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spelling doaj-34f55ab367274b84952b7adb64c1bd562021-06-10T04:32:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01166e025259610.1371/journal.pone.0252596Body size perception in stroke patients with paresis.Azam Shahvaroughi-FarahaniSally A LinkenaugerBetty J MohlerSimone C BehrensKatrin E GielHans-Otto KarnathRecent studies have suggested that people's intent and ability to act also can influence their perception of their bodies' peripersonal space. Vice versa one could assume that the inability to reach toward and grasp an object might have an impact on the subject's perception of reaching distance. Here we tested this prediction by investigating body size and action capability perception of neurological patients suffering from arm paresis after stroke, comparing 32 right-brain-damaged patients (13 with left-sided arm paresis without additional spatial neglect, 10 with left-sided arm paresis and additional spatial neglect, 9 patients had neither arm paresis nor neglect) and 27 healthy controls. Nineteen of the group of right hemisphere stroke patients could be re-examined about five months after initial injury. Arm length was estimated in three different methodological approaches: explicit visual, explicit tactile/proprioceptive, and implicit reaching. Results fulfilled the working hypothesis. Patients with an arm paresis indeed perceived their bodies differently. We found a transient overestimation of the length of the contralesional, paretic arm after stroke. Body size and action capability perception for the extremities thus indeed seem to be tightly linked in humans.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252596
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Azam Shahvaroughi-Farahani
Sally A Linkenauger
Betty J Mohler
Simone C Behrens
Katrin E Giel
Hans-Otto Karnath
spellingShingle Azam Shahvaroughi-Farahani
Sally A Linkenauger
Betty J Mohler
Simone C Behrens
Katrin E Giel
Hans-Otto Karnath
Body size perception in stroke patients with paresis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Azam Shahvaroughi-Farahani
Sally A Linkenauger
Betty J Mohler
Simone C Behrens
Katrin E Giel
Hans-Otto Karnath
author_sort Azam Shahvaroughi-Farahani
title Body size perception in stroke patients with paresis.
title_short Body size perception in stroke patients with paresis.
title_full Body size perception in stroke patients with paresis.
title_fullStr Body size perception in stroke patients with paresis.
title_full_unstemmed Body size perception in stroke patients with paresis.
title_sort body size perception in stroke patients with paresis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Recent studies have suggested that people's intent and ability to act also can influence their perception of their bodies' peripersonal space. Vice versa one could assume that the inability to reach toward and grasp an object might have an impact on the subject's perception of reaching distance. Here we tested this prediction by investigating body size and action capability perception of neurological patients suffering from arm paresis after stroke, comparing 32 right-brain-damaged patients (13 with left-sided arm paresis without additional spatial neglect, 10 with left-sided arm paresis and additional spatial neglect, 9 patients had neither arm paresis nor neglect) and 27 healthy controls. Nineteen of the group of right hemisphere stroke patients could be re-examined about five months after initial injury. Arm length was estimated in three different methodological approaches: explicit visual, explicit tactile/proprioceptive, and implicit reaching. Results fulfilled the working hypothesis. Patients with an arm paresis indeed perceived their bodies differently. We found a transient overestimation of the length of the contralesional, paretic arm after stroke. Body size and action capability perception for the extremities thus indeed seem to be tightly linked in humans.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252596
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