Tamè Luigi, Holmes Nicholas P
Centre for Integrative Neuroscience & Neurodynamics, School of Psychology & Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading, Reading, UK; Center for Mind/Brain Sciences, University of Trento, Rovereto, Italy; Department of Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck, University of London, London, UK.
School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Neuroimage. 2016 Sep;138:184-196. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2016.05.056. Epub 2016 May 24.
Detecting and discriminating sensory stimuli are fundamental functions of the nervous system. Electrophysiological and lesion studies suggest that macaque primary somatosensory cortex (SI) is critically involved in discriminating between stimuli, but is not required simply for detecting stimuli. By contrast, transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) studies in humans have shown near-complete disruption of somatosensory detection when a single pulse of TMS is delivered over SI. To address this discrepancy, we measured the sensitivity and decision criteria of participants detecting vibrotactile stimuli with individually-tailored fMRI-guided TMS over SI, over a control site not activated by vibrotactile stimuli (inferior parietal lobule, IPL), or away from the head (a no TMS condition). In a one-interval detection task, TMS increased participants' likelihood of reporting 'no' target present regardless of site, but TMS over SI also decreased detection sensitivity, and prevented improvement in tactile sensitivity over time. We then measured tactile thresholds in a series of two-interval forced-choice (2IFC) detection and discrimination tasks with lower dependence on response criteria and short-term memory load. We found that thresholds for detecting stimuli were comparable with TMS over SI and IPL, but TMS over SI specifically and significantly impaired frequency discrimination. We conclude that, in accordance with macaque studies, human SI is required for discriminating between tactile stimuli and for maintaining stimulus representations over time, or under high task demand, but may not be required for simple tactile detection.
Studies on monkeys have suggested that the primary somatosensory cortex is responsible for discriminating between different vibrations on the fingertips, but not just for detecting these vibrations. However, similar studies in humans suggest that the somatosensory cortex is required both for detecting and discriminating between tactile stimuli. We used magnetic brain stimulation to interfere with human somatosensory cortex while healthy volunteers detected and discriminated between vibrations applied to their fingertips. We found that the somatosensory cortex is required for keeping vibrotactile stimuli in memory for short periods of time and for comparing two vibrotactile stimuli, but is not required merely for detecting vibrotactile stimulation. This suggests that human primary somatosensory cortex is not always needed for vibrotactile detection.
检测和区分感觉刺激是神经系统的基本功能。电生理和损伤研究表明,猕猴的初级躯体感觉皮层(SI)在区分刺激方面起着关键作用,但并非仅仅用于检测刺激。相比之下,对人类进行的经颅磁刺激(TMS)研究显示,当在SI上方施加单个TMS脉冲时,体感检测几乎完全中断。为了解决这一差异,我们通过功能磁共振成像(fMRI)引导下对SI、未被振动触觉刺激激活的对照部位(顶下小叶,IPL)或远离头部(无TMS条件)进行个体化定制的TMS,测量了参与者检测振动触觉刺激的敏感度和决策标准。在单间隔检测任务中,无论刺激部位如何,TMS都会增加参与者报告“无”目标出现的可能性,但在SI上方进行TMS也会降低检测敏感度,并阻止触觉敏感度随时间的提高。然后,我们在一系列双间隔强制选择(2IFC)检测和辨别任务中测量触觉阈值,这些任务对反应标准和短期记忆负荷的依赖性较低。我们发现,检测刺激的阈值在对SI和IPL进行TMS时相当,但对SI进行TMS会特别且显著地损害频率辨别能力。我们得出结论,与猕猴研究一致,人类的SI对于区分触觉刺激以及随着时间推移或在高任务需求下维持刺激表征是必需的,但对于简单的触觉检测可能并非必需。
对猴子的研究表明,初级躯体感觉皮层负责区分指尖上不同的振动,但不仅仅是检测这些振动。然而, 对人类的类似研究表明,躯体感觉皮层对于检测和区分触觉刺激都是必需的。我们在健康志愿者检测和区分施加在其指尖上的振动时,使用磁脑刺激来干扰人类躯体感觉皮层。我们发现,躯体感觉皮层对于在短时间内保持振动触觉刺激记忆以及比较两种振动触觉刺激是必需的,但不仅仅是检测振动触觉刺激才需要它。这表明人类初级躯体感觉皮层并非总是进行振动触觉检测所必需的。