The man who lost his body: Suboptimal multisensory integration yields body awareness problems after a right temporoparietal brain tumour

Publication date

2019-09

Authors

Smit, Miranda
van Stralen, Haike E.
van den Munckhof, Bart
Snijders, T.J.ORCID 0000-0003-0857-081XISNI 000000039373112X
Dijkerman, Hendrik Christiaan

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Article

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Abstract

Reports on patients who lack ownership over their entire body are extremely rare. Here, we present patient SA who suffered from complete body disownership after a tumour resection in the right temporoparietal cortex. Neuropsychological assessment disclosed selective bilateral ownership problems, despite intact primary visual and somatosensory senses. SA's disownership seems to stem from a suboptimal multimodal integration, as shown by the rubber hand illusion and the beneficial effect during and after simple exercises aiming at multisensory recalibration.

Keywords

Affective touch, Bilateral ownership problems, Body ownership, Body representation, Rubber hand illusion, bilateral ownership problems, rubber hand illusion, affective touch, body ownership, body representation, Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, Behavioral Neuroscience, Journal Article

Citation

Smit, M, Van Stralen, H E, Van den Munckhof, B, Snijders, T J & Dijkerman, H C 2019, 'The man who lost his body: Suboptimal multisensory integration yields body awareness problems after a right temporoparietal brain tumour', Journal of Neuropsychology, vol. 13, no. 3, pp. 603-612. https://doi.org/10.1111/jnp.12153