Interhemispheric asymmetries in the perception of unimanual and bimanual cutaneous stimuli
Author(s) -
Massimiliano Oliveri,
Paolo Maria Rossini,
Patrizio Pasqualetti,
R. Traversa,
Paola Cicinelli,
Maria Giuseppina Palmieri,
Francesco Tomaiuolo,
Carlo Caltagirone
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
brain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.142
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1460-2156
pISSN - 0006-8950
DOI - 10.1093/brain/122.9.1721
Subject(s) - transcranial magnetic stimulation , psychology , stimulus (psychology) , sensory system , posterior parietal cortex , audiology , perception , neuroscience , interstimulus interval , scalp , somatosensory system , stimulation , medicine , cognitive psychology , anatomy
Previous studies have shown that transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) of the sensorimotor cortex can induce a suppression of cutaneous perception from the fingers of the contralateral hand. In this work, 17 normal subjects were submitted to focal TMS of frontal and parietal scalp sites of each hemisphere. TMS was delivered at two interstimulus intervals (20 and 40 ms) following a cutaneous electrical stimulation of the first, third and fifth digits of either hand or both hands near the subjective threshold of perception. The aim of our study was to investigate whether TMS could detect an asymmetrical hemispheric specialization in the sensory perception of unimanual and bimanual, ipsilateral and contralateral sensory stimuli. At each interpulse interval, the right parietal cortex was significantly more sensitive to TMS interference with stimulus detection for both contralateral and ipsilateral stimuli compared with the left parietal cortex. These effects were mainly evident during bimanual discrimination tasks. Our results are indicative of an interhemispheric difference in the detection of cutaneous sensation, showing right hemispheric prevalence in the perception of contralateral as well as of ipsilateral stimuli. They provide neurophysiological support in normal humans to the clinical evidence which indicates that right hemisphere lesions can indeed produce deficits in the perception of ipsilateral sensory stimuli.
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