Does self-recognition of one’s own fall recruit genuine bodily crisis-related brain activity?

While bipedalism is a fundamental evolutionary adaptation that is essential for the development of the human brain, the erect body is always an inch or two away from falling. Although the neural substrate underlying automatic detection of one’s own body instability is an important consideration, the...

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Main Author: Yoshiaki Kikuchi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Japanese Society of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine 2015-10-01
Series:Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jpfsm/4/4/4_299/_pdf/-char/en
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spelling doaj-e4379449ad7a4b82ac1ad3dcc0531db12021-05-28T07:52:52ZengJapanese Society of Physical Fitness and Sports MedicineJournal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine2186-81312186-81232015-10-014429930610.7600/jpfsm.4.299jpfsmDoes self-recognition of one’s own fall recruit genuine bodily crisis-related brain activity?Yoshiaki Kikuchi0Department of Frontier Health Science, Division of Human Health Sciences, Graduate School of Tokyo Metropolitan UniversityWhile bipedalism is a fundamental evolutionary adaptation that is essential for the development of the human brain, the erect body is always an inch or two away from falling. Although the neural substrate underlying automatic detection of one’s own body instability is an important consideration, there have thus far been few functional neuroimaging studies due to the restrictions placed on participants’ movements. Here, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate the neural substrate underlying whole body instability, based on a self-recognition paradigm that uses video stimuli consisting of one’s own and others’ whole bodies, depicted in both stable and unstable states. Analyses revealed significant activity in the brain regions that should be activated during genuine unstable body (physical) conditions: the right parieto-insular vestibular cortex, inferior frontal junction, posterior insula and parabrachial nucleus. We argue that these right-lateralized cortical and brainstem regions mediate vestibular information processing for detection of vestibular anomalies, defensive motor responding in which the necessary motor responses are automatically prepared/simulated to protect one’s body, and sympathetic activity as an alarm response during whole body instability.https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jpfsm/4/4/4_299/_pdf/-char/enbodyinstabilityfmriinsulapivcself
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yoshiaki Kikuchi
spellingShingle Yoshiaki Kikuchi
Does self-recognition of one’s own fall recruit genuine bodily crisis-related brain activity?
Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine
body
instability
fmri
insula
pivc
self
author_facet Yoshiaki Kikuchi
author_sort Yoshiaki Kikuchi
title Does self-recognition of one’s own fall recruit genuine bodily crisis-related brain activity?
title_short Does self-recognition of one’s own fall recruit genuine bodily crisis-related brain activity?
title_full Does self-recognition of one’s own fall recruit genuine bodily crisis-related brain activity?
title_fullStr Does self-recognition of one’s own fall recruit genuine bodily crisis-related brain activity?
title_full_unstemmed Does self-recognition of one’s own fall recruit genuine bodily crisis-related brain activity?
title_sort does self-recognition of one’s own fall recruit genuine bodily crisis-related brain activity?
publisher Japanese Society of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine
series Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine
issn 2186-8131
2186-8123
publishDate 2015-10-01
description While bipedalism is a fundamental evolutionary adaptation that is essential for the development of the human brain, the erect body is always an inch or two away from falling. Although the neural substrate underlying automatic detection of one’s own body instability is an important consideration, there have thus far been few functional neuroimaging studies due to the restrictions placed on participants’ movements. Here, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate the neural substrate underlying whole body instability, based on a self-recognition paradigm that uses video stimuli consisting of one’s own and others’ whole bodies, depicted in both stable and unstable states. Analyses revealed significant activity in the brain regions that should be activated during genuine unstable body (physical) conditions: the right parieto-insular vestibular cortex, inferior frontal junction, posterior insula and parabrachial nucleus. We argue that these right-lateralized cortical and brainstem regions mediate vestibular information processing for detection of vestibular anomalies, defensive motor responding in which the necessary motor responses are automatically prepared/simulated to protect one’s body, and sympathetic activity as an alarm response during whole body instability.
topic body
instability
fmri
insula
pivc
self
url https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jpfsm/4/4/4_299/_pdf/-char/en
work_keys_str_mv AT yoshiakikikuchi doesselfrecognitionofonesownfallrecruitgenuinebodilycrisisrelatedbrainactivity
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