Auditory Peripersonal Space in Humans
- 1 October 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by MIT Press in Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
- Vol. 14 (7) , 1030-1043
- https://doi.org/10.1162/089892902320474481
Abstract
In the present study we report neuropsychological evidence of the existence of an auditory peripersonal space representation around the head in humans and its characteristics. In a group of right brain-damaged patients with tactile extinction, we found that a sound delivered near the ipsilesional side of the head (20 cm) strongly extinguished a tactile stimulus delivered to the contralesional side of the head (cross-modal auditory-tactile extinction). By contrast, when an auditory stimulus was presented far from the head (70 cm), cross-modal extinction was dramatically reduced. This spatially specific cross-modal extinction was most consistently found (i.e., both in the front and back spaces) when a complex sound was presented, like a white noise burst. Pure tones produced spatially specific cross-modal extinction when presented in the back space, but not in the front space. In addition, the most severe cross-modal extinction emerged when sounds came from behind the head, thus showing that the back space is more sensitive than the front space to the sensory interaction of auditory-tactile inputs. Finally, when cross-modal effects were investigated by reversing the spatial arrangement of cross-modal stimuli (i.e., touch on the right and sound on the left), we found that an ipsilesional tactile stimulus, although inducing a small amount of cross-modal tactile-auditory extinction, did not produce any spatial-specific effect. Therefore, the selective aspects of cross-modal interaction found near the head cannot be explained by a competition between a damaged left spatial representation and an intact right spatial representation. Thus, consistent with neurophysiological evidence from monkeys, our findings strongly support the existence, in humans, of an integrated cross-modal system coding auditory and tactile stimuli near the body, that is, in the peripersonal space.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- The shape of ears to come: dynamic coding of auditory spaceTrends in Cognitive Sciences, 2001
- Auditory Peripersonal Space in Humans: a Case of Auditory-Tactile ExtinctionNeurocase, 2001
- Polymodal Motion Processing in Posterior Parietal and Premotor CortexNeuron, 2001
- Seeing or not seeing where your hands areExperimental Brain Research, 2000
- An experimental investigation on the nature of extinctionNeuropsychologia, 1995
- Grouping reduces visual extinction: Neuropsychological evidence for weight-linkage in visual selectionVisual Cognition, 1994
- Sound Localization by Human ListenersAnnual Review of Psychology, 1991
- Visual search and stimulus similarity.Psychological Review, 1989
- Functional organization of inferior area 6 in the macaque monkeyExperimental Brain Research, 1988
- The locus of interference in the perception of simultaneous stimuli.Psychological Review, 1980