Multisensory spatial mechanisms of the bodily self and social cognition : a commentary on Vittorio Gallese & Valentina Cuccio

dc.contributor.authorPfeiffer, Christian
dc.date.accessioned2016-11-14T08:04:14Z
dc.date.available2016-11-14T09:04:14Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.description.abstractThis commentary aims to find the right description of the pre-reflective brain mechanisms underlying our phenomenal experience of being a subject bound to a physical body (bodily self) and basic cognitive, perceptual, and subjective aspects related to interaction with other individuals (social cognition). I will focus on the proposal by Gallese and Cuccio that embodied simulation, in terms of motor resonance, is the primary brain mechanism underlying the pre-reflective aspects of social cognition and the bodily self. I will argue that this proposal is too narrow to serve a unified theory of the neurobiological mechanisms of both target phenomena. I support this criticism with theoretical considerations and empirical evidence suggesting that multisensory spatial processing, which is distinct from but a pre-requisite of motor resonance, substantially contributes to the bodily self and social cognition. My commentary is structured in three sections. The first section addresses social cognition and compares embodied simulation to an alternative account, namely the attention schema theory. According to this theory we pre-reflectively empathize with others by predicting their current state of attention which involves predicting the spatial focus of attention. Thereby we derive a representational model of their state of mind. On this account, spatial coding of attention, rather than motor resonance, is the primary mechanism underlying social cognition. I take this as a theoretical alternative complementing motor resonance mechanisms. The second section focuses on the bodily self. Comparison of the brain networks of the bodily self and social cognition reveals strong overlap, suggesting that both phenomena depend on shared multisensory and sensorimotor mechanisms. I will review recent empirical data about altered states of the bodily self in terms of self-location and the first-person perspective. These spatial aspects of the bodily self are encoded in brain regions distinct from the brain network of embodied simulation. I argue that while motor resonance might contribute to body ownership and agency, it does not account for spatial aspects of the bodily self. Thus, embodied simulation appears to be a necessary but insufficiently “primary” brain mechanism of the bodily self and social cognition. The third section discusses the contributions of the vestibular system, i.e., the sensory system encoding head motion and gravity, to the bodily self and social cognition. Vestibular cortical processing seems relevant to both processes, because it directly encodes the world-centered direction of gravity and allows us to distinguish between motions of the own body and motions of other individuals and the external world. Furthermore, the vestibular cortical network largely overlaps with those neural networks relevant to the bodily self and social cognition. Thus, the vestibular system may play a crucial role in multisensory spatial coding relating the bodily self to other individuals in the external world.en_GB
dc.identifier.doihttp://doi.org/10.25358/openscience-447
dc.identifier.urihttps://openscience.ub.uni-mainz.de/handle/20.500.12030/449
dc.identifier.urnurn:nbn:de:hebis:77-publ-551700
dc.language.isoeng
dc.rightsInC-1.0de_DE
dc.rights.urihttps://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
dc.subject.ddc100 Philosophiede_DE
dc.subject.ddc100 Philosophyen_GB
dc.titleMultisensory spatial mechanisms of the bodily self and social cognition : a commentary on Vittorio Gallese & Valentina Cuccioen_GB
dc.typeBuchbeitragde_DE
jgu.book.editorMetzinger, Thomas
jgu.book.titleOpen MIND
jgu.organisation.departmentFB 05 Philosophie und Philologie
jgu.organisation.nameJohannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
jgu.organisation.number7920
jgu.organisation.placeMainz
jgu.organisation.rorhttps://ror.org/023b0x485
jgu.pages.alternativeKap. 14(C)
jgu.publisher.doi10.15502/9783958570450
jgu.publisher.nameMIND Group
jgu.publisher.placeFrankfurt am Main
jgu.publisher.urihttp://dx.doi.org/10.15502/9783958570450
jgu.publisher.year2015
jgu.rights.accessrightsopenAccess
jgu.subject.ddccode100
jgu.type.dinitypeBookPart
jgu.type.resourceText
jgu.type.versionPublished versionen_GB
opus.date.accessioned2016-11-14T08:04:14Z
opus.date.available2016-11-14T09:04:14
opus.date.modified2016-11-14T08:19:49Z
opus.identifier.opusid55170
opus.institute.number0508
opus.metadataonlyfalse
opus.organisation.stringFB 05: Philosophie und Philologie: Philosophisches Seminarde_DE
opus.relation.ispartofcollectionOpen Mindde_DE
opus.subject.dfgcode00-000
opus.type.contenttypeKeinede_DE
opus.type.contenttypeNoneen_GB

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