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Neurobiologist Honored for
Research Showing How Brain Links Vision, Touch Berkeley, CA.... Japanese
neurobiologist Atsushi Iriki has won the annual Golden Brain Award from the
Berkeley-based Minerva Foundation for seminal work showing how the brain
connects vision and the sensation of touch. The Golden Brain Award, now in its
20th year, honors researchers who make fundamental contributions to our
knowledge of vision and the brain. Iriki will receive the award at a private
ceremony on October 25 in San Diego, where he will be attending the annual
meeting of the Society for Neuroscience. Iriki is professor of cognitive
neurobiology at the Tokyo Medical and Dental University and head of the
Laboratory for Symbolic Cognitive Development at Japan’s RIKEN Brain Science
Institute. "Iriki was the first to demonstrate
at the cellular level how the brain connects vision and tactile sensation when
we use tools," said Elwin Marg, executive director of the Minerva Foundation.
"In 1996, he showed that cells in the parietal cortex (the part of the brain in
the back of the head near the top, just in front of the visual cortex) integrate
both visual and tactile stimuli and are able to change the way they operate to
become more responsive to visual stimuli related to the self image. The
combination of different kinds of sensory information and change in the way the
cells respond enables us to extend our body image to include the tool and use it
successfully as an extension of our arm and hand.” More recently, Iriki and his colleagues have shown that brain cells respond in the same way to the image of the body in a video monitor during tool use, coding this image as an extension of the self.
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