, 2001; Sugiura et al., 2006; Uddin et al., 2006; Devue et al., 2007; Urgesi et al., 2007) and specific networks for self and other body-parts processing (Keenan et al., 2000b, 2001; Sugiura et al., 2006;
Frassinetti et al., 2008, 2009, 2010; Ivacaftor chemical structure Hodzic et al., 2009). Frassinetti et al. (2008, 2009) reported a behavioural facilitation (i.e. a self-advantage) when neurologically healthy subjects and left brain-damaged patients were presented with stimuli depicting their own compared with someone else’s body-parts (hand, foot). Instead, right brain-damaged patients did not show any self-advantage, pointing to a critical role for the right hemisphere in self-processing. Transcranial magnetic SGLT inhibitor stimulation (TMS) has elucidated the role played by the right hemisphere in self-face processing. Keenan et al. (2001) have shown that observing self-faces morphed with faces of famous people is associated with a larger increase of motor cortex excitability in the right compared with the left hemisphere, even when self-faces are masked (Théoret et al., 2004). Moreover, Uddin et al. (2006) found that repetitive TMS over the right inferior parietal lobule selectively disrupted performance on a self–other face discrimination task. These studies converge in showing right hemispheric dominance in
facial self-recognition processing. Few studies have assessed whether viewing self body-parts (e.g. hand) engage self-processes similar to those observed for self-faces. Patuzzo et al. (2003) reported that while observing fingers extension-flexion increased the amplitude of motor-evoked potentials (MEPs, see Fadiga et al., 1995), and the observation of Self vs. Other movements did not produce any significant difference. However, they assessed corticospinal excitability of the left hemisphere. Funase et al. (2007) showed that observing directly and indirectly (via a mirror) self-hand movements induced an increase in MEP amplitude, but the visually presented hand always belonged
to the experimental subject (Self). It thus remains unknown whether motor corticospinal excitability of the right hemisphere Chloroambucil is solely affected by stimuli explicitly conveying the subject’s identity (i.e. the face) or reflects self-processing also for less explicitly self body-parts (e.g. the hand). Here we tested the hypothesis that vision of one’s own hand, compared with somebody else’s hand, would engage self-processing. To this aim, healthy participants were submitted to a classic single-pulse TMS paradigm to assess changes in corticospinal excitability of their right (Experiment 1) and left (Experiment 2) motor cortex, while viewing pictures of a still hand that could either be their own (Self) or not (Other).