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Dive into the research topics where Mara Fabri is active.

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Featured researches published by Mara Fabri.


Brain Research | 1991

Topography of connections between primary somatosensory cortex and posterior complex in rat: a multiple fluorescent tracer study

Mara Fabri; Harold Burton

Thalamocortical connections between ipsilateral thalamus and the first somatic sensory area were traced with simultaneous injections of different fluorescent tracers. Labeled neuronal elements in the antero-medial part (POm) of the posterior nucleus (PO) were topographically organized as an up-right body representation that mirrored a map in the ventroposterior nuclei (VP). No topography was observed in the posterior part of PO. These findings suggest POm in rodents provides precisely organized projections, parallel with those from VP.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2001

Posterior Corpus Callosum and Interhemispheric Transfer of Somatosensory Information: An fMRI and Neuropsychological Study of a Partially Callosotomized Patient

Mara Fabri; Gabriele Polonara; Maria Del Pesce; Angelo Quattrini; U. Salvolini; Tullio Manzoni

Interhemispheric somatosensory transfer was studied by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and neuropsychological tests in a patient who underwent resection of the corpus callosum (CC) for drug-resistant epilepsy in two stages. The first resection involved the anterior half of the body of CC and the second, its posterior half and the splenium. For the fMRI study, the hand was stimulated with a rough sponge. The neuropsychological tests included: Tactile Naming Test (TNT), Same-Different Recognition Test (SDRT), and Tactile Finger Localization Test (intra- and intermanual tasks, TFLT). The patient was studied 1 week before and then 6 months and 1 year after the second surgery. Before this operation, unilateral tactile stimulation of either hand activated contralaterally the first (SI) and second (SII) somatosensory areas and the posterior parietal (PP) cortex, and SII and PP cortex ipsilaterally. All three tests were performed without errors. In both postoperative sessions, somatosensory activation was observed in contralateral SI, SII, and PP cortex, but not in ipsilateral SII and PP cortex. Performance was 100 correct in the TNT for the right hand, but below chance for the left; in the other tests, it was below chance except for TFLT in the intramanual task. This case provides the direct demonstration that activation of SII and PP cortex to stimulation of the ipsilateral hand and normal interhemispheric transfer of tactile information require the integrity of the posterior body of the CC.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 1999

Role of the corpus callosum in the somatosensory activation of the ipsilateral cerebral cortex: an fMRI study of callosotomized patients

Mara Fabri; Gabriele Polonara; Angelo Quattrini; U. Salvolini; Maria Del Pesce; Tullio Manzoni

To verify whether the activation of the posterior parietal and parietal opercular cortices to tactile stimulation of the ipsilateral hand is mediated by the corpus callosum, a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI, 1.0 tesla) study was performed in 12 control and 12 callosotomized subjects (three with total and nine with partial resection). Eleven patients were also submitted to the tactile naming test. In all subjects, unilateral tactile stimulation provoked a signal increase temporally correlated with the stimulus in three cortical regions of the contralateral hemisphere. One corresponded to the first somatosensory area, the second was in the posterior parietal cortex, and the third in the parietal opercular cortex. In controls, activation was also observed in the ipsilateral posterior parietal and parietal opercular cortices, in regions anatomically corresponding to those activated contralaterally. In callosotomized subjects, activation in the ipsilateral hemisphere was observed only in two patients with splenium and posterior body intact. These two patients and another four with the entire splenium and variable portions of the posterior body unsectioned named objects explored with the right and left hand without errors. This ability was impaired in the other patients. The present physiological and anatomical data indicate that in humans activation of the posterior parietal and parietal opercular cortices in the hemisphere ipsilateral to the stimulated hand is mediated by the corpus callosum, and that the commissural fibres involved probably cross the midline in the posterior third of its body.


Brain Research | 2011

Topographical organization of human corpus callosum: An fMRI mapping study

Mara Fabri; Gabriele Polonara; Giulia Mascioli; U. Salvolini; Tullio Manzoni

The concept of a topographical map of the corpus callosum (CC) has emerged from human lesion studies and from anatomical tracing investigations in other mammals. Over the last few years, a rising number of researchers have been reporting functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) activation in white matter, particularly the CC. In this study, the scope for describing CC topography with fMRI was explored by evoking activation through simple sensory stimulation and motor tasks. We reviewed our published and unpublished fMRI data on the cortical representation of tactile, gustatory, and visual sensitivity and of motor activation, obtained in 36 volunteers. Activation foci were consistently detected in discrete CC regions: anterior (taste stimuli), central (motor tasks), central and posterior (tactile stimuli), and splenium (visual stimuli). These findings demonstrate that the functional topography of the CC can be explored with fMRI.


Neuroscience | 1988

Cytochrome oxidase histochemistry reveals regional subdivisions in the rat periaqueductal gray matter

Fiorenzo Conti; Paolo Barbaresi; Mara Fabri

The identification of different anatomical regions of the periaqueductal gray matter of rats was addressed in the present study by using the histochemical staining for the mitochondrial enzyme cytochrome oxidase. At caudal and middle levels, cytochrome oxidase histochemistry clearly demonstrates the existence of four subdivisions: dorsal, dorsolateral, ventrolateral and medial, whereas in sections from the rostral periaqueductal gray matter only two concentric bands are identifiable on the basis of the degree of cytochrome oxidase activity.


Neuroscience | 2004

Glutamic acid decarboxylase immunoreactivity in callosal projecting neurons of cat and rat somatic sensory areas

Mara Fabri; T Manzoni

The distribution of GABAergic callosally projecting neurons was analysed in the somatic sensory areas of cat and rat cerebral cortex by combining retrograde tracing of nerve cell bodies and glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) immunocytochemistry. A retrograde tracer (colloidal gold- labelled wheat germ agglutinin conjugated to enzymatically inactive horseradish peroxidase) was injected in the first or second somatic sensory area. Brain sections were processed for the simultaneous visualisation of the retrograde tracer and GAD immunoreactivity. In all animals, double-labelled neurons were found in the hemisphere contralateral to the injection site (double-labelled callosal neurons). Their proportion was similar in both species (0.8% of all retrogradely-labelled neurons in cat, 0.7% in rat). These results: 1) confirm the existence of a small proportion of GABAergic callosally projecting neurons in rat somatic sensory cortices; 2) indicate the presence of a small but significant proportion of GAD-positive callosally projecting neurons in cat somatic sensory cortices; and 3) show that the proportion of GAD-positive callosal neurons is similar in the two species.


Neuropsychologia | 2007

Interhemispheric transfer following callosotomy in humans: Role of the superior colliculus

Silvia Savazzi; Mara Fabri; Guido Rubboli; Aldo Paggi; C. A. Tassinari; Carlo Alberto Marzi

It is now common knowledge that the total surgical section of the corpus callosum (CC) and of the other forebrain commissures prevents interhemispheric transfer (IT) of a host of mental functions. By contrast, IT of simple sensorimotor functions, although severely delayed, is not abolished, and an important question concerns the pathways subserving this residual IT. To answer this question we assessed visuomotor IT in split-brain patients using the Poffenberger paradigm (PP), that is, a behavioral paradigm in which simple reaction time (RT) to visual stimuli presented to the hemifield ipsilateral to the responding hand is compared to stimuli presented to the contralateral hemifield, a condition requiring an IT. We tested the possibility that the residual IT is mediated by the collicular commissure interconnecting the two sides of the superior colliculus (SC). To this purpose, we used short-wavelength visual stimuli, which in neurophysiological studies in non-human primates have been shown to be undetectable by collicular neurons. We found that, in both totally and partially callosotomised patients, IT was considerably longer with S-cone input than with L-cone input or with achromatic stimuli. This was not the case in healthy participants in whom IT was not affected by color. These data clearly show that the SC plays an important role in IT of sensorimotor information in the absence of the corpus callosum.


Somatosensory and Motor Research | 1986

Bilateral Receptive Fields and Callosal Connectivity of the Body Midline Representation in the First Somatosensory Area of Primates

Fiorenzo Conti; Mara Fabri; Tullio Manzoni

Experiments were performed in order to study the receptive field (RF) organization and the callosal connectivity of the trunk representation zone in areas 3b and 1 of the postcentral cortex of macaque monkeys. Multiunit microelectrode recordings showed that neurons responding to tactile stimulation of bilateral RFs across the midline of the body were contained in three topographically distinct zones of the trunk map. In one zone, at the junction between cytoarchitectonic areas 3b and 1, RFs straddled the dorsal midline of the trunk. In the other two zones, one located caudally in area 1 in front of the postcentral dimple, and the other rostrally in area 3b in the depth of the posterior bank of the central sulcus, RFs straddled the ventral midline of the trunk. The first one and the other two zones are referred to here as the dorsal and the ventral midline representation zones, respectively. Elsewhere in the trunk map, neurons responded only to stimulation of contralateral RFs. The callosal connectivity of the trunk map was studied by means of the transport of horseradish peroxidase (HRP). Multiple injections of HRP in electrophysiologically identified sites of the trunk representation in one hemisphere labeled both callosal fiber terminals and callosally projecting neurons in the contralateral homotopic cortex. Dense patches of callosal neurons intensely labeled with HRP were present in the cortical regions representing the body midlines and were distributed for the most part in layer III. Some neurons lightly labeled with HRP were scattered in other zones of the trunk map. Callosal terminations were densest within the midline zones and very sparse or absent in the lateral trunk zones. Correlation of physiological and anatomical data obtained either separately or from the same animal demonstrated that cortical regions containing bilateral-field neurons also contained the highest density of labeled callosal terminations and neurons. This correlation suggests a role for the corpus callosum in the perception of the body midline, either by generating the bilateral RFs of these neurons or by coordinating the activity of the regions containing neurons with thalamically generated bilateral RFs.


Neural Plasticity | 2013

Functional topography of human corpus callosum: an FMRI mapping study.

Mara Fabri; Gabriele Polonara

The concept of a topographical map of the corpus callosum (CC) has emerged from human lesion studies and from electrophysiological and anatomical tracing investigations in other mammals. Over the last few years a rising number of researchers have been reporting functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) activation in white matter, particularly the CC. In this study the scope for describing CC topography with fMRI was explored by evoking activation through simple sensory stimulation and motor tasks. We reviewed our published and unpublished fMRI and diffusion tensor imaging data on the cortical representation of tactile, gustatory, auditory, and visual sensitivity and of motor activation, obtained in 36 normal volunteers and in 6 patients with partial callosotomy. Activation foci were consistently detected in discrete CC regions: anterior (taste stimuli), central (motor tasks), central and posterior (tactile stimuli), and splenium (auditory and visual stimuli). Reconstruction of callosal fibers connecting activated primary gustatory, motor, somatosensory, auditory, and visual cortices by diffusion tensor tracking showed bundles crossing, respectively, through the genu, anterior and posterior body, and splenium, at sites harboring fMRI foci. These data confirm that the CC commissure has a topographical organization and demonstrate that its functional topography can be explored with fMRI.


Neuropsychologia | 2010

Abnormal Moral Reasoning in Complete and Partial Callosotomy Patients

Michael B. Miller; Walter Sinnott-Armstrong; Liane Young; Danielle King; Aldo Paggi; Mara Fabri; Gabriele Polonara; Michael S. Gazzaniga

Recent neuroimaging studies suggest lateralized cerebral mechanisms in the right temporal parietal junction are involved in complex social and moral reasoning, such as ascribing beliefs to others. Based on this evidence, we tested 3 anterior-resected and 3 complete callosotomy patients along with 22 normal subjects on a reasoning task that required verbal moral judgments. All 6 patients based their judgments primarily on the outcome of the actions, disregarding the beliefs of the agents. The similarity in performance between complete and partial callosotomy patients suggests that normal judgments of morality require full interhemispheric integration of information critically supported by the right temporal parietal junction and right frontal processes.

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Gabriele Polonara

Marche Polytechnic University

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Tullio Manzoni

Marche Polytechnic University

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U. Salvolini

Marche Polytechnic University

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Paolo Barbaresi

Marche Polytechnic University

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Fiorenzo Conti

Marche Polytechnic University

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Giulia Mascioli

Marche Polytechnic University

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Giulia Prete

University of Chieti-Pescara

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Luca Tommasi

University of Chieti-Pescara

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Chiara Pierpaoli

Marche Polytechnic University

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