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. 2003 Feb;51(1):95-101.
doi: 10.1016/s0278-2626(02)00526-2.

Representation of anatomical constraints in motor imagery: mental rotation of a body segment

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Representation of anatomical constraints in motor imagery: mental rotation of a body segment

L S Petit et al. Brain Cogn. 2003 Feb.

Abstract

Classically, the mental rotation paradigm has shown that when subjects are asked to judge whether objects that differ in orientation are spatially congruent, reaction times increase with angular discrepancy, although some reports have shown that this is not always the case. Would similar results be obtained with realistic figures of body segments? In this work, the mental rotation of a hand attached to its forearm and arm in anatomically possible and impossible starting positions is compared with the mental rotation of a hammer. The main results show that reaction times increase monotonically with the angle of discrepancy for both stimuli and that the speed of rotation is higher for anatomically possible orientations in the case of the hand. Thus, mental rotation of body segments follows the same empirical rules as objects of another nature, and biomechanical constraints imposed to the motility of these segments can be considered as attributes of the mental representation.

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