A woman born missing a finger and a thumb has grown
them back – albeit as part of a phantom limb. This extraordinary
occurrence shows that our brain contains a fully functional map of our
body image, regardless of what our limbs actually look like.
The woman, RN, was born with just
three fingers on her right hand. Aged 18, RN had the hand amputated
after a car accident. She later began to feel that her missing limb was
still present, and developed a "phantom" hand.
"But here's the interesting thing," says Paul McGeoch at the University of California, San Diego. "Her phantom hand didn't have three digits, it had five."
RN was aware of a full complement of fingers, but her phantom thumb and index finger were less than half the usual length.
With training using a mirror box trick – a tool that creates the visual illusion of two hands – McGeoch and V.S Ramachandran, also at San Diego, managed to extend her short phantom finger and thumb to normal length.
McGeoch says this study indicates that
there is a hardwired representation in the brain of what the body
should look like, regardless of how it actually appears in real life. It
shows us more about the balance between the external and innate
representations of a limb, he says.
"The presence of the deformed hand was
suppressing the brain's innate representation of her fingers which is
why they appeared shorter, but after the hand was removed and the
inhibition taken away, the innate representation kicks in again."
Matthew Longo
at Birkbeck, University of London, says it is a fascinating case study.
"It contributes to a growing literature suggesting that our conscious
experience of our body is, at least in part, dependent on the intrinsic
organisation of the brain, rather than a result of experience."
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