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A common representation of fingers and toes

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TLDR
This work obtained confusion matrices showing the pattern of mislocalisation on the hairy skin surfaces of both the fingers and toes, which suggest that there is a common representation of the hands and toes.
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This article is published in Acta Psychologica.The article was published on 2019-08-01 and is currently open access. It has received 8 citations till now.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution of the Human Foot

Richard Hope
- 18 Apr 1942 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Four meta-analyses across 164 studies on atypical footedness prevalence and its relation to handedness.

TL;DR: It was showed that the prevalence of atypical footedness ranges between 12.10% using the most conservative criterion of left-footedness to 23.7% including all left- and mixed-footers as a single non-right category, and that footing is a valuable phenotype for the study of lateral motor biases, its underlying genetics and neurodevelopment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tactile distance anisotropy on the feet.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated tactile distance anisotropy on the foot, a body part structurally and embryologically similar to the hand, but with very different patterns of functional usage in humans.
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Fingers hold spatial information that toes do not.

TL;DR: Spatial information held by the fingers is stronger and more reliable than for the toes, so is not a general characteristic of limbs, but possibly related to hand use.
Journal ArticleDOI

Body structural representation in schizotypy.

TL;DR: This article found that individuals with high schizotypal traits in the general population may be characterized by a progressive sense of detachment from one's lived body, which may represent a potential marker for schizophrenia proneness.
References
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BookDOI

The Evolution of the Primate Hand: Anatomical, Developmental, Functional, and Paleontological Evidence

TL;DR: This book demonstrates how the primate hand combines both primitive and novel morphology, both general function with specialization, and both a remarkable degree of diversity within some clades and yet general similarity across many others.
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Hand before foot? Cortical somatotopy suggests manual dexterity is primitive and evolved independently of bipedalism

TL;DR: The results suggest that adaptations underlying tool use evolved independently of those required for human bipedality, and that the brain circuits for the hand had advanced beyond simple grasping, whereas the authors' primate ancestors were still general arboreal quadrupeds.
Book ChapterDOI

Patterns, Variability, and Flexibility of Hand Posture During Locomotion in Primates

TL;DR: This chapter surveys the exceptional diversity of primate hand positions across locomotor modes, and provides a perspective on the organization of hand positioning based on underlying biomechanical similarities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tactile confusions of the fingers and toes.

TL;DR: It is suggested that mislocalizations occur at the level of individual digits, consistent with their resulting from higher level body representations, which represent the digits as volumetric units.
Journal ArticleDOI

Concurrent use of somatotopic and external reference frames in a tactile mislocalization task.

TL;DR: Investigating whether the reference frame used to integrate bilateral tactile stimuli can change as a function of the spatial relationship between the two hands demonstrated that both somatotopic and external reference frames can be concurrently used to localise tactile stimuli on the fingers.
Frequently Asked Questions (2)
Q1. What contributions have the authors mentioned in the paper "A common representation of fingers and toes" ?

Manser-Smith et al. this paper found that the human hands and feet are serially homologous structures that have co-evolved, resulting in numerous similarities between the two body parts. 

To attempt to disentangle how the body representation itself and the body ’ s position in external space contribute to localisation biases, future experiments may focus on manipulating posture of the fingers and toes relative to one another, or relative to the gaze-direction, for example. From the results of this experiment and others the authors have suggested that patterns of tactile confusions may arise from high-level body representations, which likely originate in the posterior parietal cortex. Cortical somatotopy suggests manual dexterity is primitive and evolved independently of bipedalism.