Phantom limbs: The body in mind
Author:
Peter W. Halligan
DOI:
10.1080/13546800244000111
Publication Frequency:
6 issues per year
Subjects:
Cognitive Psychology;
Psychiatry: Neuropsychiatry;
Psychiatry & Clinical Psychology - Adult: Neuropsychiatry;
Neuropsychology;
Psychiatry & Clinical Psychology - Adult;
Number of References: 49
Formats available:
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(English)
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Abstract
Introduction. Advances in our knowledge of corporeal awareness is not limited to patients with amputations, however, until recently, the study of ''phantom limbs'' was neglected by comparison with less common disorders of body perception. Method. Reasons for the neglect of this potentially informative and common condition are conspicuous by their absence in previous reviews. Over the past decade, however, experimental investigations of phantom limbs have revealed the dynamic neural processes that provide for both phantom and normal corporeal embodiment. Moreover, these findings helped to overturn widely held scientific assumptions regarding the extent of neural plasticity in the adult brain. Results. It is suggested that throughout medical history, the construct of ''phantom limbs'' posed a challenge to fundamental folk assumptions regarding the assumed relationship between body and mind. Conclusion. Reluctance to entertain the counter-intuitive phenomenon of a ''limbless perception'' contributed to the comparative neglect of this fascinating phenomenon until the late 20th century.
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