Tool-use: An open window into body representation and its plasticity

Cogn Neuropsychol. 2016 Feb-Mar;33(1-2):82-101. doi: 10.1080/02643294.2016.1167678. Epub 2016 Jun 17.

Abstract

Over the last decades, scientists have questioned the origin of the exquisite human mastery of tools. Seminal studies in monkeys, healthy participants and brain-damaged patients have primarily focused on the plastic changes that tool-use induces on spatial representations. More recently, we focused on the modifications tool-use must exert on the sensorimotor system and highlighted plastic changes at the level of the body representation used by the brain to control our movements, i.e., the Body Schema. Evidence is emerging for tool-use to affect also more visually and conceptually based representations of the body, such as the Body Image. Here we offer a critical review of the way different tool-use paradigms have been, and should be, used to try disentangling the critical features that are responsible for tool incorporation into different body representations. We will conclude that tool-use may offer a very valuable means to investigate high-order body representations and their plasticity.

Keywords: Tool-use; body image; body schema; kinematics; peripersonal space.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Body Image*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Space Perception / physiology*

Grants and funding

A.F. and A.C.R. were supported by grants from the Federation pour la Recherche sur le Cerveau, Neurodon; A.C.R. was also supported by Agence Nationale de la Recherche “Santé Mentale et Addiction” (ANR SAMENTA); A.F. was also supported by Agence Nationale de la Recherche “Cerveau et Santé Mentale” (ANR-CeSaMe), LABEX CORTEX [grant number ANR-11-LABX-0042] and the J.S. McDonnell Foundation Scholar Award.