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  4. I and me: self-portraiture in brain damage
 
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I and me: self-portraiture in brain damage

Blanke, Olaf  
Bogousslavsky, J.
•
Hennerici, M. G.
2007
Neurological disorders in famous artists

Human bodily experience is characterized by the immediate feeling that our body is localized at a certain position in space and that the self is localized within these body borders (embodiment). Recent research from cognitive neuroscience and neurology suggests that embodiment is of major importance for neuroscientific models of self and self-consciousness. This is suggested by illusory own body perceptions (such as autoscopic hallucinations, heautoscopy, and out-of-body experiences) during which the self may be experienced as being localized outside one’s body borders. I have previously argued that self-portraiture may rely on similar brain mechanisms and have proposed a classification of self-portraiture based on neurological classifications of illusory own body perceptions. Here I extend this model focussing on three types of self-portraits: visual self-portraits, disembodied self-portraits, and corporeal self-portraits. This is followed by a discussion of visuospatial, linguistic, and mnestic mechanisms in self-portraiture that are examined in selected painters

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Type
book part or chapter
Author(s)
Blanke, Olaf  
Editors
Bogousslavsky, J.
•
Hennerici, M. G.
Date Issued

2007

Publisher

Karger

Publisher place

Basel

Published in
Neurological disorders in famous artists
Start page

14

End page

29

Series title/Series vol.

Frontiers of neurology and neuroscience; 22

Issue
2
Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LNCO  
Available on Infoscience
November 16, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/57530
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