Gertz Hanna, Voudouris Dimitris, Fiehler Katja
Experimental Psychology, Justus-Liebig-Universität, Giessen, Germany
Experimental Psychology, Justus-Liebig-Universität, Giessen, Germany.
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Jun 1;117(6):2262-2268. doi: 10.1152/jn.00052.2017. Epub 2017 Mar 1.
Tactile stimuli on moving limbs are typically attenuated during reach planning and execution. This phenomenon has been related to internal forward models that predict the sensory consequences of a movement. Tactile suppression is considered to occur due to a match between the actual and predicted sensory consequences of a movement, which might free capacities to process novel or task-relevant sensory signals. Here, we examined whether and how tactile suppression depends on the relevance of somatosensory information for reaching. Participants reached with their left or right index finger to the unseen index finger of their other hand (body target) or an unseen pad on a screen (external target). In the body target condition, somatosensory signals from the static hand were available for localizing the reach target. Vibrotactile stimuli were presented on the moving index finger before or during reaching or in a separate no-movement baseline block, and participants indicated whether they detected a stimulus. As expected, detection thresholds before or during reaching were higher compared with baseline. Tactile suppression was also stronger for reaches to body targets than external targets, as reflected by higher detection thresholds and lower precision of detectability. Moreover, detection thresholds were higher when reaching with the left than with the right hand. Our results suggest that tactile suppression is modulated by position signals from the target limb that are required to reach successfully to the own body. Moreover, limb dominance seems to affect tactile suppression, presumably due to disparate uncertainty of feedback signals from the moving limb. Tactile suppression on a moving limb has been suggested to release computational resources for processing other relevant sensory events. In the current study, we show that tactile sensitivity on the moving limb decreases more when reaching to body targets than external targets. This indicates that tactile perception can be modulated by allocating processing capacities to movement-relevant somatosensory information at the target location. Our results contribute to understanding tactile processing and predictive mechanisms in the brain.
在伸手够物的计划和执行过程中,移动肢体上的触觉刺激通常会减弱。这种现象与预测运动感觉后果的内部前向模型有关。触觉抑制被认为是由于运动的实际和预测感觉后果之间的匹配而发生的,这可能会释放处理新的或与任务相关的感觉信号的能力。在这里,我们研究了触觉抑制是否以及如何依赖于体感信息对伸手够物的相关性。参与者用左手或右手食指伸向另一只手看不见的食指(身体目标)或屏幕上看不见的垫子(外部目标)。在身体目标条件下,来自静止手部的体感信号可用于定位伸手够物的目标。在伸手够物之前、期间或在单独的无运动基线块中,在移动的食指上施加振动触觉刺激,参与者指出他们是否检测到刺激。正如预期的那样,与基线相比,伸手够物之前或期间的检测阈值更高。与外部目标相比,伸向身体目标时的触觉抑制也更强,这表现为更高的检测阈值和更低的可检测性精度。此外,用左手伸手够物时的检测阈值高于用右手时。我们的结果表明,触觉抑制受到成功伸向自身身体所需的来自目标肢体的位置信号的调节。此外,肢体优势似乎会影响触觉抑制,大概是由于来自移动肢体的反馈信号存在不同程度的不确定性。有人提出,移动肢体上的触觉抑制会释放计算资源来处理其他相关的感觉事件。在当前研究中,我们表明,伸向身体目标时移动肢体上的触觉敏感性比伸向外部目标时下降得更多。这表明,通过将处理能力分配给目标位置与运动相关的体感信息,可以调节触觉感知。我们的结果有助于理解大脑中的触觉处理和预测机制。