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J Physiol Vol 478, Issue Pt 3 pp 533-540
Copyright © 1994 by The Physiological Society
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Spatial cues serving the tactile directional sensibility of the human forearm.

U Norrsell and H Olausson

Department of Physiology, University of Göteborg, Sweden.

1. Tactile directional sensibility is considered to rely on the parallel processing of direction-contingent sensory data that depend on skin stretching caused by friction, and spatial cues that vary with time. A temperature-controlled airstream stimulus that prevented the activation of stretch receptors was used to investigate directional sensibility for the skin of the forearm. 2. The dependence on contact load and distance of movement was determined for normal subjects with a two-alternative forced-choice method. Testing was performed under two conditions, elbow bent or straight. Bracing the skin by straightening the arm did not alter the accuracy of the directional sensibility, in contrast to previous findings with stimuli that caused friction. 3. The accuracy of directional sensibility was correlated linearly to the logarithm of the distance of movement of the air jet. No correlation was found between accuracy and contact load, unlike findings with stimuli that cause friction. 4. Measurements were made with different subjects to determine the threshold distance at constant load. On average, subjects were able to distinguish direction with movements of < or = 8 mm. This acuity is sharper than has been reported with static stimuli. There was no correlation between subjects' threshold distances for judging direction and spatial acuity measured with absolute point localization. 5. The ability to distinguish direction was poor for the airstream stimulus compared with stimuli causing frictional contact with hairy skin. Nevertheless, the present findings are consistent with the suggestion that cutaneous spatial acuity is better for dynamic than for static stimuli.




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Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USAHome page
Y. C. Pei, S. S. Hsiao, and S. J. Bensmaia
The tactile integration of local motion cues is analogous to its visual counterpart
PNAS, June 10, 2008; 105(23): 8130 - 8135.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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