eprintid: 3845 rev_number: 7 eprint_status: archive userid: 69 dir: disk0/00/00/38/45 datestamp: 2017-12-28 10:29:31 lastmod: 2017-12-28 10:29:31 status_changed: 2017-12-28 10:29:31 type: article metadata_visibility: show creators_name: Ricciardi, Emiliano creators_name: Menicagli, Dario creators_name: Leo, Andrea creators_name: Costantini, Marcello creators_name: Pietrini, Pietro creators_name: Sinigaglia, Corrado creators_id: emiliano.ricciardi@imtlucca.it creators_id: creators_id: creators_id: creators_id: pietro.pietrini@imtlucca.it creators_id: title: Peripersonal space representation develops independently from visual experience ispublished: pub subjects: RC0321 divisions: CSA full_text_status: public keywords: Perception; sensory processing abstract: Our daily-life actions are typically driven by vision. When acting upon an object, we need to represent its visual features (e.g. shape, orientation, etc.) and to map them into our own peripersonal space. But what happens with people who have never had any visual experience? How can they map object features into their own peripersonal space? Do they do it differently from sighted agents? To tackle these questions, we carried out a series of behavioral experiments in sighted and congenitally blind subjects. We took advantage of a spatial alignment effect paradigm, which typically refers to a decrease of reaction times when subjects perform an action (e.g., a reach-to-grasp pantomime) congruent with that afforded by a presented object. To systematically examine peripersonal space mapping, we presented visual or auditory affording objects both within and outside subjects’ reach. The results showed that sighted and congenitally blind subjects did not differ in mapping objects into their own peripersonal space. Strikingly, this mapping occurred also when objects were presented outside subjects’ reach, but within the peripersonal space of another agent. This suggests that (the lack of) visual experience does not significantly affect the development of both one’s own and others’ peripersonal space representation. date: 2017 date_type: published publication: Scientific Reports volume: 7 number: 1 publisher: Nature Publishing Group pagerange: 17673 id_number: doi:10.1038/s41598-017-17896-9 refereed: TRUE issn: 2045-2322 official_url: http://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-17896-9 funders: Italian Ministero dell’Istruzione PRIN2015-2015WXAXJF citation: Ricciardi, Emiliano and Menicagli, Dario and Leo, Andrea and Costantini, Marcello and Pietrini, Pietro and Sinigaglia, Corrado Peripersonal space representation develops independently from visual experience. Scientific Reports, 7 (1). p. 17673. ISSN 2045-2322 (2017) document_url: http://eprints.imtlucca.it/3845/1/s41598-017-17896-9.pdf