Neuroscience and Architecture: Modulating behavior through sensorimotor responses to the built environment.

Djebbara, Zakaria; Jensen, Ole B.; Parada, Francisco J.; Gramann, Klaus

Keywords: thalamus, pulvinar, exogenous attention, Environmental feature, Sensorimotor feature, Neuroarchitecture

Abstract

As we move through the world, natural and built environments implicitly guide behavior by appealing to certain sensory and motor dynamics. This process can be motivated by automatic attention to environmental features that resonate with specific sensorimotor responses. This review aims at providing a psychobiological framework describing how environmental features can lead to automated sensorimotor responses through defined neurophysiological mechanisms underlying attention. Through the use of automated processes in subsets of cortical structures, the goal of this framework is to describe on a neuronal level the functional link between the designed environment and sensorimotor responses. By distinguishing between environmental features and sensorimotor responses we elaborate on how automatic behavior employs the environment for sensorimotor adaptation. This is realized through a thalamo-cortical network integrating environmental features with motor aspects of behavior. We highlight the underlying transthalamic transmission from an Enactive and predictive perspective and review recent studies that effectively modulated behavior by systematically manipulating environmental features. We end by suggesting a promising combination of neuroimaging and computational analysis for future studies.

Más información

Título de la Revista: NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS
Volumen: 104715
Número: 1
Editorial: Elsevier
Fecha de publicación: 2022
Página de inicio: 1
Página final: 13
Idioma: English
URL: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0149763422002044
Notas: WOS