The brains of disabled people adjust to a wheelchair and treat it as
an extension of their body, essentially replacing limbs that don't
function properly anymore, new research suggests.
The findings provide more insight into how the brain
compensates when it uses tools like a wheelchair, or even something as
simple as a hammer or toothbrush, said study lead author Mariella
Pazzaglia, an assistant professor at the Sapienza University of Rome, in
Italy.
In the future, Pazzaglia said, this kind of research could lead
to ways to enhance the body in people who are physically impaired.
"Bodily representations can be extended to include exoskeletons,
prostheses, robots and virtual avatars," she said.
At issue is what scientists call "brain plasticity," which
describes the brain's ability to learn and adjust, something people do
quite often when young and continue to do as they get older.
"If we learn how to play a piano or drive somewhere, that's
plasticity in action," said Dr. Alexander Dromerick, chief of
rehabilitation medicine at Georgetown University Medical Center in
Washington, D.C.
Human brains also can compensate for bodily changes such as the
loss of a limb by adjusting what's known as the internal body map. The
new study sought to understand how the brains of disabled people change
their body maps to include wheelchairs.
The researchers surveyed 55 people in wheelchairs with spinal
cord injuries about their lives, and then analyzed their responses. The
study authors determined that the participants treated wheelchairs as
part of their bodies, not simply as extensions of their limbs.
The study also found that people who had more movement in their
upper limbs could interact more with wheelchairs, and this improved
their ability to incorporate them into their body images.
Essentially, the participants' brains go into an automatic mode
when it comes to using the wheelchairs. This leads to "more efficient
and safer use, with lower costs, risks and dangers to the body,"
Pazzaglia said.
"To elude dangerous objects in the environment and the collisions
that may occur during wheelchair use, the brain needs to encode an
internal representation of the body that includes the wheelchair," she
said.
"Moreover, the simple action of picking objects up from the floor
without tipping out of the wheelchair implies a change in the
representation of the body to enable this to happen successfully and
without the risk of possible damage to the individual due to a fall,"
she added. "All daily activities become an automatic way of thinking,
not merely a mechanical or practical process."
Automatic thinking -- based on body maps that encompass inanimate
objects -- plays plenty of other roles in people's lives, Georgetown's
Dromerick said. For example, people who can wield a hammer effectively
or parallel park with ease have learned to treat hammers and cars as
extensions of themselves, he said.
The study appeared March 6 in the journal PLoS One.
Source : Webmd ( 6th March 2013 )
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