Brain Sciences (Jul 2020)

Body Representations in Children with Cerebral Palsy

  • Antonella Di Vita,
  • Maria Cristina Cinelli,
  • Simona Raimo,
  • Maddalena Boccia,
  • Stefano Buratin,
  • Paola Gentili,
  • Maria Teresa Inzitari,
  • Teresa Iona,
  • Marco Iosa,
  • Daniela Morelli,
  • Francesco Ruggeri,
  • Giuseppina Russo,
  • Cecilia Guariglia,
  • Liana Palermo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci10080490
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 8
p. 490

Abstract

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We constantly process top-down and bottom-up inputs concerning our own body that interact to form body representations (BR). Even if some evidence showed BR deficits in children with cerebral palsy, a systematic study that evaluates different kinds of BR in these children, taking into account the possible presence of a general deficit affecting non-body mental representations, is currently lacking. Here we aimed at investigating BR (i.e., Body Semantics, Body Structural Representation and Body Schema) in children with cerebral palsy (CP) taking into account performance in tasks involving body stimuli and performance in tasks involving non-body stimuli. Thirty-three CP (age range: 5–12 years) were compared with a group of 103 typically-developing children (TDC), matched for age and sex. 63.64% of children with CP showed a very poor performance in body representation processing. Present data also show alterations in different body representations in CP in specific developmental stages. In particular, CP and TDC performances did not differ between 5 to 7 years old, whereas CP between 8 and 12 years old showed deficits in the Body Structural Representation and Body Schema but not in Body Semantics. These findings revealed the importance of taking into account the overall development of cognitive domains when investigating specific stimuli processing in children who do not present a typical development and were discussed in terms of their clinical implications.

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