Body image and body schema interdisciplinary perspectives on the body
The body, as the common ground for objectivity and (inter)subjectivity, is a phenomenon with a perplexing plurality of registers. Therefore, this innovative volume offers an interdisciplinary approach from the fields of neuroscience, phenomenology and psychoanalysis. The concepts of body image and b...
Otros Autores: | , |
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
J. Benjamins
2005.
|
Edición: | 1st ed |
Colección: | Advances in consciousness research ;
v. 62. |
Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009798380906719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Body Image and Body Schema
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Addresses
- Introduction
- 1. Interdisciplinarity
- 1.1. The body: Body image and body schema
- 1.2. Towards a dynamic structuralism?
- 2. The headlines
- 2.1. Embodiment, speech and mirror neurons
- 2.2. Dissociation of body image and body schema and ways of embodiment
- 2.3. Dynamic interpretations of body image and body schema
- 2.4. Clinical approaches and the mirror stage
- Note
- References
- Embodiment, speech and mirror neurons
- Body schema, body image, and mirror neurons
- 1. The concepts of body schema and body image, and the problem about the mind/brain/body interface(s)
- 2. The concept of body schema
- 2.1. The two foundational body schemas - the body schema and the superficial schema
- 2.2. The body schema of Wilder Penfield
- 2.3. The innate body schema as a blueprint of the ``physical self''
- 2.4. The body ``representation'' in the brain
- 3. The concept of body image
- 3.1. How the body awareness becomes embedded in the body
- 3.2. The voice experience of cogito ergo sum as a component of the body image
- 3.3. The voice experience and the dual-feedback monitoring architecture of human self-consciousness
- 4. The body image and the embodied self
- 5. Fragments of the embodied self vs. the invisible symbolic self
- 6. How to trigger the extraction of a body image from a body schema: The MNS scenario
- 7. Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Two phenomenological logics and the mirror neurons theory
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The mediating term between ego and other: A shift in emphasis
- 3. The privilege of the speaking voice
- 4. Consequences for intersubjectivity and communication
- 5. Merleau-Ponty's phenomenological point of view on speech and its consequences.
- 6. Learning new behaviour and the problem of imitation
- 7. The mediating term between ego and other: Common body or common object?
- 8. The mirror neurons theory: Imitation and understanding of actions and speech
- 8.1. Mirror neurons and their characteristics
- 8.2. The function of mirror neurons: Action understanding
- 8.3. The function of mirror neurons: imitation and learning new behaviour
- 8.4. Mirror neurons and speech
- 9. Conclusion: Intersubjectivity and the mediating term
- Notes
- References
- Some comments on the emotional and motor dynamics of language embodiment
- 1. Introduction
- 2. With high emotion language breaks into fragments
- 2.1. Que faire?
- 2.2. The Ratman
- 2.3. Patient F. and the `f'-series
- 3. Language fragments are objects
- 3.1. Language as a motor act
- 3.2. Language fragments are objects, not actions
- 3.3. Language fragments and emotional memory
- 4. A hypothetical model for the dynamic unconscious
- 4.1. Repression and phantoms: Intentions not acted upon
- 4.2. The dynamic unconscious: A linguistic action space organized by phonemic attractors
- Notes
- References
- Dissociation of body image and body schema and ways of embodiment
- Vectorial versus configural encoding of body space
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Sensorimotor versus representational levels of processing
- 3. The what and where dichotomy
- 4. The vectorial versus configural encoding of body space
- 5. Evidence for a dual mapping in deafferented patients
- 5.1. Perception without location
- 5.2. Location without perception
- 6. In conclusion: The biological roots of identity
- Notes
- References
- Implicit body representations in action
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Body schemas and body images
- 3. Dissociations between body schema and body image
- 3.1. Numbsense
- 3.2. Unilateral neglect.
- 4. Bottom - up interaction between body schema and body image
- 4.1. Body representation and vestibular stimulation
- 4.2. Body representation and prism adaptation
- 5. Dynamic relationships between body schema and body image
- References
- Body self and its narrative representation in schizophrenia
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The incomplete body in schizophrenia narratives: An attempt to recover wholeness
- 3. The Provisional unity of body-image/body-schema: Self as hidden mediator of frames of reference
- 4. Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Body structure in psychotic and autistic children
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Autism and psychosis in children: The epidemiological conundrum and the Harry Potter effect
- 3. The body problem in psychotic and autistic children: Classical Freudian views
- 4. Evidence of body image perturbations in autistic-psychotic children
- 5. Critical phases in body-structuration
- 6. A few consequences
- References
- Radical embodiment*
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Animal adventure and vegetal rest
- 2.1. Animality is mobility
- 2.2. Vegetality is security
- 3. Spontaneity of the vegetal and anxiety of the animal
- 3.1. The secure life of the animal
- 3.2. Vegetal growth as spontaneous life
- 4. Conclusion: Embodiment is permeability
- Notes
- References
- Dynamic interpretations of body image and body schema
- A functional neurodynamics for the constitution of the own body
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Somatotopic cartography and functional plasticity
- 3. Penfield's homunculus and its contemporary ``Verification''
- 4. Reorganisations of the functional structure following a deafferentation
- 5. Remodelling induced by Experience (1): The somatosensory cortex
- 6. Remodelling induced by Experience (2): The motor cortex
- 7. Pluralism in the models of neurobiological explanation.
- 8. Autonomy and experience in the constitution of the own body
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- References
- What are we naming?*
- Introduction
- I
- II
- III
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Dynamic models of body schematic processes
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The conceptual distinction and its applications
- 3. Body schema: Static or dynamic?
- 4. Body image: Dynamism and synchrony
- 5. The neurological critique
- 6. Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Clinical approaches and the mirror stage
- Phenomenology and psychoanalysis on the mirror stage
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Metaphysics of presence versus metaphysics of non-presence
- 3. Lacan and Merleau-Ponty on the mirror stage
- 3.1. Merleau-Ponty
- 3.2. The body image is an identification and not a representation
- 3.3. The body image has a unified character and is not partial
- 3.4. Body image and body schema: a matter of dialectics between organisational levels
- 4. Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Looking at the mirror image
- 1. Introduction
- 2. In the mirror/in front of the mirror
- 3. The imaginary, the symbolic and the real
- 4. A fleeting glance
- 5. An element and its unitary class
- 6. Conclusion
- References
- Anorectics and the mirror
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Need, demand, desire
- 3. The cry of a desire in danger of never emerging
- 4. Bodies and the mirror
- 5. The cruel dominance of the specular image in anorexia nervosa
- 6. Being complete: The anorectic representation of death
- 7. Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Françoise Dolto's clinical conception of the unconscious body image and the body schema
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Dolto's conception of the unconscious body image
- 3. Body image and body schema
- 4. The threefold composition of the body image
- 5. Clinical fragments
- 5.1. The body image appears through speech.
- 5.2. The body image represents unconscious structures
- 5.3. Creations represent the libidinal body
- 6. Discussion
- 7. Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- On the relation of the body image to sensation and its absence
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The effects of sensory alterations on one's body image
- 2.1. Vibration and perception sense
- 2.2. Numb big fingers
- 2.3. Feeling a phantom
- 2.4. Visual capture of sensation
- 2.5. Visuo-motor capture of the whole body image
- 3. Conceptual understanding of one's own body: Lessons from Spinal Cord Injury
- 3.1. The sensation of nothing
- 3.2. Visual capture revisited
- 3.3. ``My friend the pain''
- 3.4. The new visual image
- 3.5. Body Image and the environment: Lived space and time
- 3.6. Body image from agency
- 3.7. Doing and being, through a personal assistant
- 3.8. The body image and the environment: The big idea
- 3.9. New body schema after SCI
- 3.10. Body image from others
- 3.11. Being normal
- 4. Conclusions
- 4.1. Will, ownership and image
- 4.2. The social and the imaginative
- Acknowledgement
- References
- Name index
- Subject index
- The series Advances in Consciousness Research.