Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
PLoS One. 2012;7(9):e45438. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0045438. Epub 2012 Sep 24.
While the directionality of tactile motion processing has been studied extensively, tactile speed processing and its relationship to direction is little-researched and poorly understood. We investigated this relationship in humans using the 'tactile speed aftereffect' (tSAE), in which the speed of motion appears slower following prolonged exposure to a moving surface.
We used psychophysical methods to test whether the tSAE is direction sensitive. After adapting to a ridged moving surface with one hand, participants compared the speed of test stimuli on the adapted and unadapted hands. We varied the direction of the adapting stimulus relative to the test stimulus.
Perceived speed of the surface moving at 81 mms(-1) was reduced by about 30% regardless of the direction of the adapting stimulus (when adapted in the same direction, Mean reduction = 23 mms(-1), SD = 11; with opposite direction, Mean reduction = 26 mms(-1), SD = 9). In addition to a large reduction in perceived speed due to adaptation, we also report that this effect is not direction sensitive.
Tactile motion is susceptible to speed adaptation. This result complements previous reports of reliable direction aftereffects when using a dynamic test stimulus as together they describe how perception of a moving stimulus in touch depends on the immediate history of stimulation. Given that the tSAE is not direction sensitive, we argue that peripheral adaptation does not explain it, because primary afferents are direction sensitive with friction-creating stimuli like ours (thus motion in their preferred direction should result in greater adaptation, and if perceived speed were critically dependent on these afferents' response intensity, the tSAE should be direction sensitive). The adaptation that reduces perceived speed therefore seems to be of central origin.
尽管触觉运动处理的方向已得到广泛研究,但触觉速度处理及其与方向的关系却鲜有研究且知之甚少。我们使用“触觉速度后效(tSAE)”研究了这种关系,在该后效中,长时间暴露于运动表面后,运动速度看起来会变慢。
我们使用心理物理学方法来测试 tSAE 是否对方向敏感。在一只手上适应具有一定纹路的移动表面后,参与者用未适应的手和适应的手来比较测试刺激的速度。我们改变适应刺激相对于测试刺激的方向。
无论适应刺激的方向如何(当以相同方向适应时,平均减少量为 23 mms(-1),标准差为 11;当以相反方向适应时,平均减少量为 26 mms(-1),标准差为 9),表面以 81 mms(-1)速度移动时的感知速度都会降低约 30%。除了由于适应而导致的感知速度大幅降低外,我们还报告说该效果对方向不敏感。
触觉运动易受速度适应的影响。这一结果补充了先前关于使用动态测试刺激时可靠的方向后效的报告,因为它们共同描述了触觉中对移动刺激的感知如何取决于即时的刺激历史。由于 tSAE 对方向不敏感,我们认为外周适应并不能解释它,因为对于我们这样的产生摩擦力的刺激,初级传入纤维对方向敏感(因此在其首选方向上的运动应该会导致更大的适应,如果感知速度严重依赖于这些传入纤维的反应强度,那么 tSAE 应该对方向敏感)。因此,降低感知速度的适应似乎源于中枢。