Lesions Causing Alice in Wonderland Syndrome Map to a Common Brain Network Linking Body and Size Perception

Author:

Friedrich Maximilian U.12ORCID,Baughan Elijah C.3,Kletenik Isaiah12ORCID,Younger Ellen4,Zhao Charlie W.1,Howard Calvin1,Ferguson Michael A.1,Schaper Frederic L.W.V.J.12,Chen Amalie5,Zeller Daniel6,Piervincenzi Claudia7,Tommasin Silvia7ORCID,Pantano Patrizia78,Blanke Olaf9,Prasad Sashank10,Nielsen Jared A.311,Fox Michael D.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Brain Circuit Therapeutics, Brigham & Women's Hospital Boston MA

2. Harvard Medical School Boston MA

3. Department of Psychology Brigham Young University Provo UT

4. School of Psychology, Faculty of Health Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia

5. Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital Boston MA

6. Department of Neurology University Hospital Wuerzburg Würzburg Germany

7. Department of Human Neurosciences Sapienza University of Rome Rome Italy

8. IRCCS Neuromed, Pozzilli Isernia Italy

9. Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience, Neuro‐X Institute, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) Lausanne Switzerland

10. Department of Neurology University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine Pennsylvania PA

11. Neuroscience Center Brigham Young University Provo UT

Abstract

ObjectiveAlice in Wonderland syndrome (AIWS) profoundly affects human perception of size and scale, particularly regarding one's own body and the environment. Its neuroanatomical basis has remained elusive, partly because brain lesions causing AIWS can occur in different brain regions. Here, we aimed to determine if brain lesions causing AIWS map to a distributed brain network.MethodsA retrospective case–control study analyzing 37 cases of lesion‐induced AIWS identified through systematic literature review was conducted. Using resting‐state functional connectome data from 1,000 healthy individuals, the whole‐brain connections of each lesion were estimated and contrasted with those from a control dataset comprising 1,073 lesions associated with 25 other neuropsychiatric syndromes. Additionally, connectivity findings from lesion‐induced AIWS cases were compared with functional neuroimaging results from 5 non‐lesional AIWS cases.ResultsAIWS‐associated lesions were located in various brain regions with minimal overlap (≤33%). However, the majority of lesions (≥85%) demonstrated shared connectivity to the right extrastriate body area, known to be selectively activated by viewing body part images, and the inferior parietal cortex, involved in size and scale judgements. This pattern was uniquely characteristic of AIWS when compared with other neuropsychiatric disorders (family‐wise error‐corrected p < 0.05) and consistent with functional neuroimaging observations in AIWS due to nonlesional causes (median correlation r = 0.56, interquartile range 0.24).InterpretationAIWS‐related perceptual distortions map to one common brain network, encompassing regions critical for body representation and size‐scale processing. These findings lend insight into the neuroanatomical localization of higher‐order perceptual functions, and may inform future therapeutic strategies for perceptual disorders. ANN NEUROL 2024

Publisher

Wiley

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