In this chapter, we describe two experiments that used functional imaging techniques to identify the neural correlates underlying the selection mechanisms employed to reach and grasp a specific object in the visual field. We asked participants to perform a reach-to-grasp action towards three-dimensional stimuli presented either in isolation or flanked by physically identical distractor objects. In Experiment 1, three stimuli were presented simultaneously, two of which abruptly retracted into the apparatus leaving the remaining stimulus as the target to be grasped. In Experiment 2, the target and distractors remained visible at all times. From comparing the condition in Experiment 1 where a target object appeared at an unpredictable location with a condition where the target object appeared at a predictable location, activations in the left parieto-occipital sulcus and the right intraparietal sulcus were found. In Experiment 2, where the distractors were visible at all times, only the r...

A neuroimaging study of selection-for-action: a reach-to-grasp study

CASTIELLO, UMBERTO
2004

Abstract

In this chapter, we describe two experiments that used functional imaging techniques to identify the neural correlates underlying the selection mechanisms employed to reach and grasp a specific object in the visual field. We asked participants to perform a reach-to-grasp action towards three-dimensional stimuli presented either in isolation or flanked by physically identical distractor objects. In Experiment 1, three stimuli were presented simultaneously, two of which abruptly retracted into the apparatus leaving the remaining stimulus as the target to be grasped. In Experiment 2, the target and distractors remained visible at all times. From comparing the condition in Experiment 1 where a target object appeared at an unpredictable location with a condition where the target object appeared at a predictable location, activations in the left parieto-occipital sulcus and the right intraparietal sulcus were found. In Experiment 2, where the distractors were visible at all times, only the r...
2004
Attention in Action: Advances from Cognitive Neuroscience
9780203449226
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/1341467
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