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Contribution Details

Type Journal Article
Scope Discipline-based scholarship
Title Effects of parietal TMS on somatosensory judgments challenge interhemispheric rivalry accounts
Organization Unit
Authors
  • N Eshel
  • Christian Ruff
  • B Spitzer
  • F Blankenburg
  • J Driver
Item Subtype Original Work
Refereed Yes
Status Published in final form
Language
  • English
Journal Title Neuropsychologia
Publisher Elsevier
Geographical Reach international
ISSN 0028-3932
Volume 48
Number 12
Page Range 3470 - 3481
Date 2010
Abstract Text Interplay between the cerebral hemispheres is vital for coordinating perception and behavior. One influential account holds that the hemispheres engage in rivalry, each inhibiting the other. In the somatosensory domain, a seminal paper claimed to demonstrate such interhemispheric rivalry, reporting improved tactile detection sensitivity on the right hand after transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to the right parietal lobe (Seyal, Ro, & Rafal, 1995). Such improvement in tactile detection ipsilateral to TMS could follow from interhemispheric rivalry, if one assumes that TMS disrupted cortical processing under the coil and thereby released the other hemisphere from inhibition. Here we extended the study by Seyal et al. (1995) to determine the effects of right parietal TMS on tactile processing for either hand, rather than only the ipsilateral hand. We performed two experiments applying TMS in the context of median-nerve stimulation; one experiment required somatosensory detection, the second somatosensory intensity discrimination. We found different TMS effects on detection versus discrimination, but neither set of results followed the prediction from hemispheric rivalry that enhanced performance for one hand should invariably be associated with impaired performance for the other hand, and vice-versa. Our results argue against a strict rivalry interpretation, instead suggesting that parietal TMS can provide a pedestal-like increment in somatosensory response.
Free access at PubMed ID
Digital Object Identifier 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2010.07.031
PubMed ID 20678510
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