Login / Signup

Disentangling Representations of Object and Grasp Properties in the Human Brain.

Sara FabbriKevin M StubbsRhodri CusackJody C Culham
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
To grasp something, the visual properties of an object guide preshaping of the hand into the appropriate configuration. Different grips can be used, and different objects require different hand configurations. However, in natural actions, grip and object type are often confounded, and the few experiments that have attempted to separate them have produced conflicting results. As such, it is unclear how visual and motor properties are represented across brain regions during grasping. Here we orthogonally manipulated object properties and grip, and revealed the visual dimension (object elongation) and the motor dimension (number of digits) that are more strongly coded in ventral and dorsal streams. These results suggest that both streams play a role in the visuomotor coding essential for grasping.
Keyphrases
  • working memory
  • spinal cord
  • white matter
  • multiple sclerosis