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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 15, 1998, 18(16):6539-6548
Cerebrally Lateralized Mental Representations of Hand Shape
and Movement
Lawrence M.
Parsons1,
John D. E.
Gabrieli2,
Elizabeth A.
Phelps3, and
Michael S.
Gazzaniga4
1 Research Imaging Center, University of Texas Health
Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas 78284, 2 Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford,
California 94305, 3 Department of Psychology, Yale
University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, and 4 Program in
Cognitive Neuroscience, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire
03755
 |
ABSTRACT |
Previous psychophysical and neuroimaging studies suggest that
perceiving the handedness of a visually presented hand depends on
sensorimotor processes that are specific to the limb of the stimulus
and that may be controlled by the cerebral hemisphere contralateral to
the limb. Therefore, it was hypothesized that disconnection between
cerebral hemispheres would disrupt mental simulation of a hand
presented to the ipsilateral, but not the contralateral, hemisphere.
This hypothesis was examined by the present study in which two
callosotomy patients and eight healthy controls judged the handedness
of drawings of left and right hands in various positions, without
moving or inspecting their own hands. Stimuli were presented for 150 msec in the right or left visual hemifield. As predicted, for each
hemisphere, patients' accuracy was high when the hand was
contralateral to the perceiving hemisphere, but it was not above chance
when it was ipsilateral to the perceiving hemisphere. Controls'
accuracy was high in both conditions. Response time analyses indicate
patients, like controls, mentally simulated reaching into stimulus
postures. When the stimulus laterality was ipsilateral to the
perceiving hemisphere, patients imagined the hand contralateral to the
perceiving hemisphere reaching into the stimulus posture but did not
detect the mismatch, guessing with a response bias or responding on the
basis of shape similarity. We conclude that each hemisphere could
represent the shape and movement of the contralateral hand but could
not for the ipsilateral hand. Mentally simulating one's action and
discriminating body part handedness both depend on lateralized
sensorimotor and somatosensory representations.
Key words:
motor imagery; shape recognition; cerebral
lateralization; split brain; mental imagery; visual object
discrimination
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Humans can recognize or discriminate
the shapes of objects from different viewpoints in many instances
(Rock, 1973
; Biederman, 1987
; Tarr, 1995
; Ullman, 1996
). If the shapes
to be discriminated are sufficiently similar, such as an object and its
mirror image, we reorient the objects or ourselves by mental or
physical means to compare the shapes at the same viewpoint (Shepard and
Cooper, 1982
; Hinton and Parsons, 1988
). When deciding whether a hand is a left or right hand, psychophysical studies (Parsons, 1987b
, 1994
)
indicate that observers imagine their own hand moving from its
orientation during the task into the stimulus orientation for
comparison. Typically, subjects imagine their left hand in the
orientation of left stimuli and their right hand in the orientation of
right stimuli. A rapid initial perceptual analysis of hand shape allows
subjects to imagine moving first what often turns out to be the correct
hand. The trajectory imagined for the left hand is strongly influenced
by the biomechanical constraints on actual left-hand movements;
likewise, the trajectories imagined for their right hand reflect its
constraints.
Some of the principal data supporting this account are as follows. The
time for the left-right hand judgments (without moving or seeing
one's own hands) is identical or proportional to time for actual
movement from one's position during that task into the stimulus
orientation (without making a left-right judgment). Likewise, the time
for imagining movement (without making a left-right judgment) is
proportional to that for making the left-right judgment. The time for
three tasks is specific to the body part involved, reflecting different
joint constraints, i.e., response time (RT)-orientation functions for the left hand, right hand, left foot, and right foot are
different from one another. Studies have documented such correspondences between the time to imagine other movements and the
time required to perform them (Decety et al., 1989
; Decety and
Lindgren, 1991
; Decety and Jeannerod, 1998
). Moreover, in a positron
emission tomography (PET) study of the hand judgment task, virtually
all brain regions known to participate in the planning and execution of
bodily movements were active (Parsons et al., 1995
). Indeed, PET,
functional MRI, and magnetoencephalogram studies of various
tasks indicate that motor imagery can activate brain areas at least
partially overlapping many or all of the brain areas activated by overt
motor behavior (for review, see Jeannerod and Decety, 1995
; Crammond,
1997
).
Overall, these findings, among others, imply that judging whether a
presented hand is a right or left hand depends on limb-specific sensorimotor mental simulation that uses limb-specific sensorimotor programs that would be expected to be in the sensorimotor cortex that
controls the contralateral hand (Penfield and Jasper, 1954
; Brinkman
and Kuypers, 1972
). If so, then a callosotomy individual with complete
disconnection between hemispheres should be capable of the mental
simulation necessary for a left-right judgment of a hand visually
presented selectively to the contralateral hemisphere but not of a hand
presented to the ipsilateral hemisphere. We tested this prediction with
two callosotomy patients and eight healthy control subjects.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Subjects. V.P., a 42-year-old female, has been in
good health since 1979 when she underwent a two-stage callosotomy
sparing the anterior commissure. The operation was treatment for
pharmacologically intractable epilepsy caused by febrile illness at the
age of 6 years. She regularly performs at chance on a number of tests
of visual interhemispheric interaction, despite having a few spared fibers at the splenial and rostral tips (Sidtis et al., 1981
; Gazzaniga, 1989
). J.W., a 41-year-old male, also underwent in 1979 a two-stage callosal surgery with sparing of the anterior commissure.
The surgery was treatment for pharmacologically intractable epilepsy
brought on by concussive head trauma at the age of 13 years.
Each subject's right hemisphere has been shown to be capable of
understanding simple verbal instructions (Sidtis et al., 1981
), and so
both hemispheres could be tested in this experiment. Both participants
are right-handed. [More information on these two patients, including
magnetic resonance scans, is available (Sidtis et al., 1981
; Holtzman,
1984
; Gazzaniga et al., 1985
; Fendrich and Gazzaniga, 1989
; Gazzaniga,
1989
; Jha et al., 1997
)]. In addition, four males and four females
participated as control subjects. The eight control subjects were
right-handed, were between the ages of 28 and 49 years (mean age, 37 years), and were not known to have any neurological disorders.
Stimuli. A left hand and right hand (Fig.
1) were portrayed in 72 postures each
(Parsons, 1987b
, 1994
). Left and right hands were mirror images of one
another but were otherwise identical. A left or right hand shown from
one of five views was oriented either upright, upside-down, clockwise
30, 60, 90, 120, or 150°, or counterclockwise 30, 60, 90, 120, or
150° (about the line-of-sight axis) from the pictures. All 120 stimuli (5 views × 12 orientations × 2 handed forms) were
presented in each visual hemifield in random order in each half of the
experiment. Thus, there were 480 trials, with each hemisphere judging
each stimulus twice. Each stimulus was presented for 150 msec with its
closest edge at 1.5° of visual angle to the left or right of a
central fixation point. Digitized versions of hand-drawn stimuli were
presented on an Apple Macintosh IIci computer, each subtending ~5°
of visual angle.

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Figure 1.
Each left-hand stimulus shown at lateral
orientations in the top elliptical series, at medial
postures in the bottom elliptical series, and at the
endpoint postures of 0 and 180° orientations, which are neither
medial nor lateral. Right-hand stimuli (data not shown) were exact
mirror reflections of the left-hand stimuli.
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|
Stimulus orientation effects on RT. Previous studies show
that RT for the left-right judgment of a hand (without moving or seeing one's own hand) is strongly influenced by the length of the
trajectory to move the hand from its orientation during the task to the
orientation of the stimulus (Parsons, 1987b
, 1994
). The length of this
trajectory and the judgment RT are shorter when the hand faces the
body's midsaggital plane (termed a medial orientation) than when the
hand is facing away from the body's midsaggital plane (termed a
lateral orientation). In Figure 1, the lateral orientations are shown
in the top elliptical series of hands, and the medial
orientations are shown in the bottom elliptical series.
These different trajectory lengths are consequences of intrinsic joint
constraints in the arm and hand. The left-right judgment RTs here are
analyzed in terms of medial, lateral, and 0 and 180° orientations
(which are neither medial nor lateral orientations). RT to stimuli are
analyzed as RT orientation functions in which the mean RT across
subject group and/or trial (as indicated in Results) is plotted for
each lateral orientation, medial orientation, 0° orientation, and
180° orientation.
Experimental procedure. After studying left and right forms
of each stimulus, each subject practiced on trials in which 48 stimuli
(an equal number of right and left hands) were presented randomly to
either hemifield until a response was made. Then, each participant
performed the experiment in two sessions. In each trial, a stimulus was
presented randomly in one or the other visual hemifield. Each patient
understood that either hand could appear in either hemifield.
J.W. performed all trials by pressing a left key with his left index
finger to indicate a left-hand stimulus and a right key with his right
index finger to indicate a right-hand stimulus. In the first and last
quarters of V.P.'s trials, she used the left middle finger to press
the leftmost key for a stimulus showing a left-hand stimulus and the
left index finger to press the rightmost key for a stimulus showing a
right-hand stimulus. In the middle two quarters of her trials, V.P.
used the right index finger to press the leftmost button for a
left-hand stimulus and right middle finger to press the rightmost
button for a right-hand stimulus.
Control subjects performed tasks by pressing a left key with their left
index fingers to indicate a left-hand stimulus and a right key with
their right index fingers to indicate a right-hand stimulus.
The computer recorded the time (±1 msec) from stimulus onset to
button-press response and the accuracy of each response. Each subject
was instructed to fixate the crosshair fixation point during a trial,
to not to tilt his or her head, to keep his or her body still while
performing a trial, and to respond as quickly and accurately as
possible. An experimenter was seated behind the subject during the
experiment.
 |
RESULTS |
Patients judged stimulus handedness accurately when the handedness
of the stimulus was contralateral to the hemisphere perceiving it
(contralateral trials) and judged it inaccurately when the handedness of the stimulus was ipsilateral to the hemisphere perceiving it (ipsilateral trials). As shown in Figure
2, the performance of J.W. and V.P. on
the ipsilateral trials was about one-third as accurate as that on
contralateral trials (
2(2) = 64.94;
p < 0.001) and fell below the chance level of 50%. This pattern of effects was true for both the left and right cerebral hemispheres. There was lower accuracy for the right hemisphere than for
the left one on ipsilateral trials (
2(2) = 12.30; p < 0.001) and a trend
(p < 0.20) toward the same effect on
contralateral trials. There was no significant difference in the
patients' accuracy across the five stimuli (p > 0.20) or the seven orientations (p > 0.15).

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Figure 2.
The accuracy of patients J.W. and V.P. and of
healthy control subjects for the left-right judgment, plotted with
respect to the cerebral hemisphere receiving the visual stimulus and
the relationship between that stimulated hemisphere and the handedness
of the stimulus. Error bars indicate SE.
|
|
Overall, the patients were more accurate and faster when the handedness
of the stimulus was contralateral to the hemisphere perceiving it
(82%, 683 msec for correct trials only) and less accurate and
slower when the handedness of the stimulus was ipsilateral to the
hemisphere perceiving it (30%, 979 msec). Statistical analysis of the experimental factor of response hand for V.P. revealed no
significant interaction with any other experimental factors, so this
factor was ignored in all subsequent analyses. In terms of overall
accuracy and RT, the performances of V.P. and J.W. were highly
correlated (r = +0.98 for a single test of the eight means in Figs. 1, 5), relative to which cerebral hemisphere was stimulated and to whether the presented hand was contralateral or
ipsilateral to the stimulated hemisphere (F(1,6) = 154.40; p < 0.00001).
The healthy control subjects, unlike the patients, performed quite
accurately (Fig. 2) on both contralateral and ipsilateral trials. There
was no significant difference (p > 0.05)
between control subjects' accuracy on contralateral and ipsilateral
trials for either the left or right hemisphere. Nonetheless, there was a trend in controls' data across those conditions such that accuracy was greatest for left hemisphere contralateral, less for right hemisphere contralateral, less still for left ipsilateral, and least
for right ipsilateral. Patients showed this same pattern of accuracy
(r = +0.91; F(1,2) = 9.59;
p < 0.09). Thus, in terms of accuracy, patients'
single hemisphere performance may be a systematic distortion of trends
in controls' dual hemisphere performance. This observation suggests
that both single and dual hemisphere performance is affected by the
brief presentation of the stimulus to a single hemisphere. The tendency
toward greater accuracy of the left hemisphere compared with right in
both the controls and patients suggests some degree of hemispheric
specialization for the task. The tendency toward greater error by
control subjects on ipsilateral trials is likely attributable to the
degradation of briefly glimpsed visual information as it is transferred
from stimulated hemisphere to the other hemisphere (Hellige, 1993
). The
greater error by patients on ipsilateral trials, discussed in detail
below, very likely has other causes.
The patients performed the task using the same kind of strategy as
healthy subjects. There was no significant difference between the
accuracy of patients on the contralateral trials and that of healthy
controls on either contralateral or ipsilateral trials (p > 0.20). Both controls and patients showed
the effects of the stimulus posture (see Materials and Methods,
Stimulus orientation effects on RT) such that medial orientations were
longer than lateral ones (t(1,19) = 3.66;
p < 0.0001; t(1,19) = 4.43;
p < 0.0001) and such that among the 0 and
180° orientations, the more awkward orientations requiring longer
trajectory paths to physically adopt required greater RT
(t(1,4) = 3.66; p < 0.0001;
t(1,4) = 2.38; p < 0.05). Moreover, the RT orientation function for correct contralateral trials, averaged across the patients, was well correlated with that of healthy controls; across all stimuli, except that of the
side of the hand viewed from the little finger, the correlation was
r = +0.63 (F(1,46) = 30.67;
p < 0.000001), and across all five stimuli, it was
r = +0.37 (F(1,58) = 9.06;
p < 0.003). Figure 3
shows the RT orientation function for each stimulus on contralateral trials for patients and controls as groups. Note that the previous studies of motor imagery and real movement that used these five stimuli
observed more variability in RTs with the side of the hand viewed from
the little finger than with the other four stimulus views (Parsons,
1987b
, 1994
). This is attributable to the fact that there is a greater
variety of hand and arm movements available to move from the
orientation of the hand in the task into the stimulus posture (in
particular, to those orientations in which the fingers point within
60° of downward).

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Figure 3.
RT-orientation functions for patients and for
healthy control subjects on contralateral trials for each
stimulus.
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|
Patient J.W.'s RT orientation function on contralateral trials was
well correlated with that of V.P.: individual stimuli, r = +0.66 (F(1,10) = 7.90;
p < 0.01); r = +0.62
(F(1,10) = 6.28; p < 0.03);
r = +0.41 (F(1,10) = 2.01;
p < 0.18); r = +0.40
(F(1,10) = 1.93; p < 0.19); and
r = +0.38 (F(1,10) = 1.38;
p < 0.26).
The RT orientation function for patients' left hemisphere
contralateral trials was well correlated with that for their right hemisphere trials (r = +0.48;
F(1,48) = 14.07; p < 0.0004).
Likewise, the control subjects' RT-orientation functions for left and
right visual hemifields were correlated to the same extent
(r = +0.48; F(1,58) = 16.28;
p < 0.0001). This good correspondence between patients' left and right hemisphere RT orientation function is further
evidence that the two hemisphere are performing the task in a similar
manner on contralateral trials.
This variation in RT for the left-right hand judgment task is very
likely primarily a function of variation in the time required to
mentally simulate movements of the arm of different trajectory lengths
to different stimulus hand postures (Parsons, 1987b
, 1994
). Although
there is variation in the time for perceptual analysis (i.e.,
unfamiliar postures take longer than familiar ones), psychophysical studies with healthy subjects (Parsons, 1994
) indicate that it is much
smaller than the variation in time for movement and simulated movement.
Patients' RT orientation function on contralateral trials was well
correlated with the real-movement time by orientation function when the
time to perceive the stimulus was separated from the time to actually
move (Parsons, 1994
); across all stimuli, except that of the side of
the hand viewed from the little finger, the correlation was
r = +0.49 (F(1,46) = 14.81;
p < 0.0003), and across all five stimuli, the
correlation was r = +0.30
(F(1,58) = 5.87; p < 0.01).
Patients' accuracy was below chance (
2(1) = 4.8; p < 0.05) on trials in which the handedness of
the stimulus was ipsilateral to the hemisphere perceiving it. Close
analysis of the RTs suggests that often on ipsilateral trials, subjects
used the hemisphere receiving the stimulus to mentally simulate moving
the hand contralateral to it into the stimulus orientation and then to
either guess with a bias for the contralateral hand or respond on the
basis of the similarity between the stimulus and the contralateral
hand. Before discussing that analysis, we note that the observed data
contradict three alternative models of performance.
First, the patients' ipsilateral trial data are inconsistent with the
possibility that they responded trivially on basis of hemifield of
stimulation (e.g., pushing the left button for stimuli in left visual
field). This model predicts a constant rapid RT, because one needs only
to detect the hemifield of stimulation; imagining actions that possess
trajectories of varying length is unnecessary. This prediction is
clearly contradicted, because subjects' RT-orientation functions are
quite variable (Figs. 3, 4), in
accordance with the model that mental simulation of reaching is used
with the simulated path limited by actual joint constraints, a model to
which both these callosotomy subjects (on contralateral trials) and
healthy subjects conformed quite well. This model also predicts that
all stimuli presented in a hemifield elicit the same response, a
prediction contradicted by the patients' error rate on ipsilateral
trials (70%). Second, the below-chance accuracy and strong systematic
variation in RT with stimulus orientation (Fig. 4, top left
plot) contradict the model that states that instead of imagining
reaching into the stimulus posture, the patients were just randomly
guessing stimulus handedness (perhaps because they were at a loss
without a representation of an ipsilateral stimulus). Third, patients'
poor accuracy is also inconsistent with the possibility that their
comparison between ipsilateral and contralateral hands led them to
disconfirm the stimulus handedness and then allowed them to infer the
accurate alternative.

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Figure 4.
A test of the model that on ipsilateral trials
patients used the hemisphere receiving the stimulus to mentally
simulate moving the hand contralateral to it into the stimulus
orientation, even when it was the inappropriate (ipsilateral) hand (see
Results). Shown for each stimulus are the contralateral
hand-based RT-orientation functions for patients on ipsilateral trials
and the RT-orientation functions for healthy control subjects on
ipsilateral trials.
|
|
The best model of performance on ipsilateral trials assumes that
patients imagined moving the hand contralateral to the hemisphere receiving the visual stimulus so that its palm and fingers were oriented like those of the stimulus, but that they did not detect the
mismatch in shape and either (1) guessed with a response bias for the
contralateral hand or (2) responded on the basis of shape similarity
(irrespective of laterality). To test the model on RTs, a special
"contralateral hand-based" function was composed for all
responses on ipsilateral trials (regardless of accuracy). If patients
imagined their contralateral hand so that its fingers and palm were
aligned with the fingers and palm of the ipsilateral stimulus, then RTs
for ipsilateral stimuli should be strongly influenced by the joint
constraints on motion of the contralateral hand rather than the
ipsilateral one (Parsons, 1987b
, 1994
). Therefore, in the case of this
contralateral hand-based function, because the left and right hands
have joint constraints 180° out of phase in movement space (American
Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, 1965; Parsons, 1987b
), trials in
which stimuli showed lateral orientations of a hand were treated as
medial trials and vice versa. The model is confirmed if this
contralateral hand-based RT orientation function for ipsilateral trials
is similar to the untransformed RT orientation function for
corresponding contralateral trials (for correct responses only). This
similarity is predicted because RTs on both kinds of trial are produced
by mental simulations of a hand with the same joint constraints on
movement.
This contralateral hand-based function composed of the two patients'
RT data on ipsilateral trials is well correlated over all stimuli with
the RT orientation function for the controls. For the individual
stimuli (Fig. 4), the correlation between the patient group's
contralateral hand-based RT-orientation function and the control
group's data was r = +0.79
(F(1,10) = 17.52; p < 0.001);
r = +0.74 (F(1,10) = 11.98;
p < 0.006); r = +0.74
(F(1,10) = 12.26; p < 0.005);
r = +0.73 (F(1,10) = 11.68;
p < 0.006); and r = +0.50
(F(1,10) = 3.45; p < 0.09).
Over all stimuli, this correlation was r = +0.48
(F(1,58) = 17.50; p < 0.0001).
The correlation between the patients' contralateral hand-based
function for ipsilateral trials and their untransformed function for
contralateral trials across all stimuli was r = +0.56
(F(1,58) = 27.35; p < 0.00001). This statistical comparison is not guaranteed to yield a correlation; if RTs for medial and lateral stimulus orientations are switched in the
healthy controls' group data on ipsilateral trials to compose such a
contralateral hand-based function, it is poorly correlated with the
untransformed function on the controls' contralateral trials
(r = +0.007; F(1,58) = 0.003;
p < 0.95). This contralateral hand-based RT
orientation function is also well correlated with the real-movement
time by orientation function when the time to perceive the stimulus is
separated from the time to actually move (Parsons, 1994
); across all
stimuli, except that of the side of the hand viewed from the little
finger, the correlation was r = +0.48
(F(1,46) = 14.20; p < 0.0004),
and across all five stimuli, the correlation was r = +0.40 (F(1,58) = 11.58; p < 0.001). This indicates that the contralateral hand-based RT orientation
function is strongly influenced by the imagined trajectory length from the patients' task-specific hand position into the stimulus
orientation. In addition, patient J.W.'s contralateral hand-based RT
orientation function on ipsilateral trials was fairly well correlated
with that of V.P.; across four of the stimuli, the correlation was r = +0.33 (F(1,46) = 5.61;
p < 0.02); individual stimuli, r = +0.51 (F(1,10) = 3.51; p < 0.09); r = +0.45 (F(1,10) = 2.52; p < 0.14); r = +0.37
(F(1,10) = 1.61; p < 0.23);
r = +0.37 (F(1,10) = 1.57;
p < 0.23); and r = +0.31
(F(1,10) = 1.07; p < 0.32). In combination, these analyses provide reasonably strong support for the
model.
This contralateral hand-based RT orientation function for the
patients' ipsilateral trials can be averaged with their RT orientation function for contralateral trials to compose an overall RT orientation function for each stimulus. The resulting functions allow a comparison of the RT orientation function of patients and controls with a considerably larger sample size. These functions for patients are well
correlated with controls' RT orientation averaged over ipsilateral and
contralateral trials; over all stimuli, except that showing the side of
the hand from the little finger, the correlation was r = +0.69 (F(1,46) = 41.59; p < 0.0000001), and over all stimuli it was r = +0.50
(F(1,58) = 19.13; p < 0.00005). These close fits are further evidence that patients perform the task
according to the process models described above.
The patients' right hemisphere was faster overall to respond correctly
(Fig. 5) than the left hemisphere
(t(292) = 3.43; p < 0.001).
There was no overall difference between left and right hemisphere
trials for the controls in which the two cerebral hemispheres cooperatively perform the tasks; in addition, the controls showed no
strong trend toward a speed-accuracy tradeoff. The patients' right
hemisphere advantage in RT is comparable to that of another commissurotomized subject (L.B.) in the related task of judging whether
a misoriented letter is in its normal or mirror-reversed form
(Corballis and Sergent, 1988
). The right hemisphere speed advantage was
present primarily on ipsilateral trials for which there was a
nonsignificant trend for the left hemisphere to be more accurate; thus,
although there were relatively few correct ipsilateral trials, there
was a trend toward a speed-accuracy tradeoff in this regard.

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Figure 5.
Mean RT on correct left-right judgments for
patients J.W. and V.P. and for healthy control subjects plotted with
respect to the cerebral hemisphere receiving the visual stimulus and
the relationship between that stimulated hemisphere and the handedness
of the stimulus. Error bars indicate SE.
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|
The patients and controls show fairly similar patterns of overall RT
across hemisphere and kind of trial, such that both show a tendency for
much greater RT for ipsilateral than contralateral trials when the left
hemisphere is stimulated and much less difference in RT for ipsilateral
and contralateral trials when the right hemisphere is stimulated. This
difference between RT in ipsilateral and contralateral trials was
significant for controls only on left hemisphere trials
(t(809) = 4.54; p < 0.001).
There was no significant differences (p > 0.10)
in either patient among RT means on contralateral trials for either
hemisphere or on ipsilateral trials for either hemisphere.
There was trend in the patients' RTs on the correct contralateral
trials, suggesting that the right hemisphere performed the imagined
movements more rapidly than the left hemisphere, although there was
insufficient sample size to test statistically. This trend is found in
RTs from a subset of the trials used to compose the RT means in Figure
5. On contralateral trials with stimuli in which there was likely to be
the shortest length of imagined movement, there was no difference in
the patients' mean RT for trials involving the left and right
hemisphere; however, on contralateral trials with stimuli in which
there was likely to be the longest length of imagined movement, the
right hemisphere in the patient group was 210 msec faster than the
left hemisphere. Thus, although our data above indicate that each
hemisphere can mentally simulate action of their respective
contralateral hands with the same biomechanical verisimilitude, the
right hemisphere, apparently specialized for visual-spatial tasks
(Ratcliff, 1979
; DeRenzi, 1982
; Deutsch et al., 1988
), performed such
simulations at an overall faster rate (although with somewhat less
accuracy). It is worth noting that despite similarities in patients'
left and right hemisphere performance, various processes (e.g.,
attention, spatial analysis, and pragmatic knowledge of movements) may
be involved in different ways or to different extents in the task
performance by each hemisphere.
Finally, we note that the patients were faster in general than the
control subjects. This difference in overall RT very likely reflects
individual differences (i.e., V.P. was within the typical RT range
indicated by our control subject group, whereas J.W. was more of an
outlier), as well as much greater general familiarity and practice of
the patients who have participated in many studies involving
tachistoscopic hemifield presentation and speeded reaction time
experiments, compared with the control subjects for whom this study was
a novel experience.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The striking double dissociation in the callosotomy patients'
accuracy as a function of the lateralities of the stimulus and of the
cerebral hemisphere receiving the stimulus confirms the hypothesis that
mentally simulating one's action and discriminating body part
handedness both depend on lateralized motor and somatosensory representations. Our data suggest that within each cerebral hemisphere there are representations of the contralateral hand and its movement that are effective for spatial cognition and motor imagery, but such
representations of the ipsilateral hand are absent altogether in the
right hemisphere and are exceedingly ineffective in the left (dominant)
hemisphere. Apparently, the left hemisphere is sufficient and necessary
for the right-hand motor imagery, and the right hemisphere is
sufficient and necessary for the left-hand motor imagery. Furthermore,
our results imply that each hemisphere alone can support the mental
simulation of an action with RT properties such as those in which the
hemispheres can interact, which in turn closely correspond to
real-movement time (Parsons, 1994
). These data may be among the
strongest evidence that the left hemisphere alone is capable of
performing imagined spatial transformations and does them at least as
accurately as the right hemisphere (for weaker evidence, see Corballis
and Sergent, 1988
).
The apparent presence of a very weak representation of the ipsilateral
hand in the left hemisphere, but none in the right one, is consistent
with earlier studies of motor behavior consequent to callosotomy in
human and monkey (Gazzaniga, 1964
; Gazzaniga et al., 1967
; Volpe et
al., 1982
) and with the specialization of the left hemisphere for
organizing bilateral motor activity (Kimura, 1977
; Bradshaw and
Nettleton, 1981
; Bryden, 1982
; MacNeilage et al., 1987
; Fisk and
Goodale, 1988
; Harrington and Haaland, 1991
). The right (nondominant)
hemisphere apparently lacks a representation of the shape and movement
of the right hand (and perhaps other right body parts), despite its
possibly enhanced capacity for object recognition (Yin, 1970
;
Warrington and Taylor, 1973
; Hecaen and Albert, 1978
; Levy, 1983
;
Hamilton and Vermeire, 1988
; Hellige, 1993
; Ivry and Robertson, 1997
).
Thus, the right hemisphere may have representations of a hand (not
coded explicitly for handedness) and definitely has representations of
a left hand, but it is does not have one of a right hand; this is
compatible with the view that humans do not in general represent object
shape so as to discriminate a shape from its mirror image
(Corballis and Beale, 1976
; Hinton and Parsons, 1988
).
The close link observed in callosotomy patients between the laterality
of the imagined hand and of cerebral hemisphere is consistent with
recent data from neuroimaging and neuropsychological studies. A PET
study of this task in healthy subjects (Parsons and Fox, 1998
) observed
limb-contralateral neural structures activated by limb-specific motor
imagery, including presupplementary motor area (pre-SMA),
inferior premotor cortex [Brodmann area (BA) 44/46], and superior
frontal sulcal premotor cortex (BA 4). These areas are implicated in
higher-order aspects of motor control, movement preparation and
selection, action recognition and copying, spatial working memory, and
guidance and execution of self-paced movements. These brain areas would
presumably be unable to support our callosotomy patients' single
hemisphere performance on ipsilateral trials, and their absence would
in part account for the poor performance on those trials. The Parsons
and Fox (1998)
study also observed neural structures active in the
dominant left hemisphere regardless of the limb involved in the motor
imagery, including SMA proper, superior premotor (BA 6), and inferior
parietal (BA 40). These areas are implicated in planning, guidance, and
attention to motor performance, and their presumed absence during our
patients' right hemisphere performance would in part account for its
diminished performance. In addition, there were also neural structures
active in the nondominant right hemisphere regardless of the limb
involved in motor imagery, including dorsal superior premotor (BA 6),
insula, superior parietal (BA 7), and inferior occipitotemporal (BA 37) cortices. These areas have been implicated in motor planning, high-level somatic representation, the evaluation of visuospatial information, and the representation of the identity of objects and
actions. These areas would presumably be unable to support the
patients' left hemisphere performance.
Furthermore, in patients with damage to motor cortex, mentally
simulated movements reflect the decreased motor efficiency of the
affected limb; executed and imagined hand movements are slowed to the
same extent (Sirigu et al., 1995
). There are similar laterality effects
in the impairments of imagined and executed movements in patients with
basal ganglia dysfunction attributable to Parkinson's disease (Dominey
et al., 1995
). In addition, damage to parietal lobe disrupts the
correlation in performance time between imagined movement and real
movement (patients are either too fast or too slow in imagery or are
inconsistent) (Sirigu et al., 1996
). Patients with right parietal
damage have impaired left-hand motor imagery (unimpaired left limb
movement); patients with left parietal damage have impaired right- and
left-hand motor imagery. The latter results suggest that motor imagery
of the left hand may be weakly dependent on left (dominant) hemisphere support, perhaps consistent with the trend toward less accurate right
hemisphere performance by patients and controls on contralateral trials
in the present study. Indeed, the latter suggestions are consistent
with the earlier studies of motor behavior in callosotomy subjects
(Gazzaniga, 1964
; Gazzaniga et al., 1967
; Volpe et al., 1982
) showing
poorer ipsilateral hand control by the right hemisphere than the left
one.
That common brain areas support both mentally simulated and actual
movement is consistent with the fact that the physiological correlates
of mental simulation of body movement are often similar to, although
weaker than, those for executed body movement (Jeannerod, 1995
).
The double dissociation of hand representation and cerebral hemisphere
and the effect of actual joint constraints on the mental simulation of
one's action emphasize the domain specificity of imagined spatial
transformation processes. This handedness task elicits operations on
sensorimotor information rather than on visual representations alone,
probably because the somatomotor system represents and operates on body
part representations that specify handedness (unlike other
representations of object shape).
It is also notable that each hemisphere of the callosotomy subjects
could detect a match in shape to make the correct judgment but that
neither hemisphere alone was able to detect a mismatch in shape between
the left and right hand and infer it was the other hand. Thus,
for this judgment to be performed accurately, the hemispheres must
interact (Gazzaniga, 1989
; Hellige, 1993
; Ivry and Robertson, 1997
).
The inability of a hemisphere to disconfirm that an imagined hand is
different from the stimulus is striking and worthy of some discussion.
The avoidance of disconfirmation is consistent with the very strong
bias against disconfirmation shown in the dual hemisphere performance
of healthy individuals, in favor of exact match confirmation (Parsons,
1987a
,b
, 1994
). People may prefer to use exact match confirmation when
they are equally familiar with both mirror forms of a shape and to use disconfirmation when they are much more familiar with one of the two
mirror forms. The former condition is consistent with the finding that
in many judgment domains people prefer to use confirmation (Nisbett and
Ross, 1980
; Fischhoff and Beyth-Marom, 1983
). This preference is
attributed to the fact that in natural settings we often have
independent evidence that the hypothesis we are attempting to confirm
is more likely to be correct than incorrect (Klayman and Ha, 1987
).
Correspondingly, healthy subjects use disconfirmatory match comparisons
and inferences in tasks when they have to judge whether a letter is
presented in its normal (i.e., very familiar) or mirror-reversed
(unfamiliar) form. Likewise, in callosotomy patients, the right
hemisphere can disconfirm that a misoriented letter stimulus is a
normal letter by first comparing it (as it appears when imagined to be
upright) to the memorized normal form and then inferring that the
stimulus is mirror-reversed (Corballis and Sergent, 1988
). However, the
right hemisphere cannot, as the present data indicate, perform the
corresponding disconfirmation of shape and inference for a hand (both
forms of which are equally familiar).
Of course, a preference for using exact match confirmation rather than
disconfirmation is quite different from the inability to use
disconfirmation whatsoever: that is, the inability to detect a mismatch
between imagined and stimulus hands in the face of very frequent error.
Healthy subjects do not appear to show such disability; although their
introspections and RTs indicate a strong tendency to use exact match
confirmation, they report using disconfirmation ~6% of the time
overall (Parsons, 1987b
). The callosotomy patients' inability to use
disconfirmation on ipsilateral trials is unlikely to directly follow
from their condition; disconnection of the cerebral hemispheres does
not disrupt visual areas within each hemisphere, and the patients
demonstrate their ability to detect matches between their imagined
contralateral hand and a stimulus showing the contralateral hand. It is
unclear at present why the patients avoided disconfirmation. It is
conceivable that with training (e.g., feedback) or with a modified task
they could begin to rely on disconfirmation on the ipsilateral trials.
Further study of this surprising feature of their performance is
necessary to understand its implications for callosotomy patients and
for models of this task.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received May 4, 1998; revised May 28, 1998; accepted June 1, 1998.
We thank Emilio Bizzi and Alan Baddeley for discussion in early phases
of this project, Howard Hughes, Wendy Francis, and Michael Martinez for
assistance with experiments, and an anonymous reviewer for thoughtful
suggestions.
Correspondence should be addressed to Lawrence M. Parsons, Research
Imaging Center, University of Texas Health Science Center at San
Antonio, 7703 Floyd Curl Drive, San Antonio, TX 78284-6240.
 |
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