1. Brain activation associated with practiced left hand mirror writing
- Author
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Y. Arzouan, Avi Karni, Tammar Kushnir, and David Manor
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Brain activation ,Handwriting ,Linguistics and Language ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Premotor Areas ,Audiology ,Brain mapping ,Functional Laterality ,Language and Linguistics ,Young Adult ,Speech and Hearing ,medicine ,Humans ,Learning ,Hand mirror ,Right hemisphere ,Psychomotor learning ,Brain Mapping ,Brain ,Mirror writing ,Hand ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Female ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Mirror writing occurs in healthy children, in various pathologies and occasionally in healthy adults. There are only scant experimental data on the underlying brain processes. Eight, right-handed, healthy young adults were scanned (BOLD-fMRI) before and after practicing left-hand mirror-writing (lh-MW) over seven sessions. They wrote dictated words, using either the right hand with regularly oriented writing or lh-MW. An MRI compatible stylus-point recording system was used and online visual feedback was provided. Practice resulted in increased speed and readability of lh-MW but the number of movement segments was unchanged. Post-training signal increases occurred in visual, right lateral and medial premotor areas, and in right anterior and posterior peri-sylvian areas corresponding to language areas. These results suggest that lh-MW may constitute a latent ability that can be reinstated by a relatively brief practice experience. Concurrently, right hemisphere language processing areas may emerge, reflecting perhaps a reduction in trans-hemispheric suppression.
- Published
- 2013