School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia; Neuroscience Research Australia, Barker Street, Randwick, NSW 2031, Australia.
School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia; Neuroscience Research Australia, Barker Street, Randwick, NSW 2031, Australia.
Curr Biol. 2017 May 22;27(10):1485-1490.e2. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.04.011. Epub 2017 May 4.
Skin vibrations sensed by tactile receptors contribute significantly to the perception of object properties during tactile exploration [1-4] and to sensorimotor control during object manipulation [5]. Sustained low-frequency skin vibration (<60 Hz) evokes a distinct tactile sensation referred to as flutter whose frequency can be clearly perceived [6]. How afferent spiking activity translates into the perception of frequency is still unknown. Measures based on mean spike rates of neurons in the primary somatosensory cortex are sufficient to explain performance in some frequency discrimination tasks [7-11]; however, there is emerging evidence that stimuli can be distinguished based also on temporal features of neural activity [12, 13]. Our study's advance is to demonstrate that temporal features are fundamental for vibrotactile frequency perception. Pulsatile mechanical stimuli were used to elicit specified temporal spike train patterns in tactile afferents, and subsequently psychophysical methods were employed to characterize human frequency perception. Remarkably, the most salient temporal feature determining vibrotactile frequency was not the underlying periodicity but, rather, the duration of the silent gap between successive bursts of neural activity. This burst gap code for frequency represents a previously unknown form of neural coding in the tactile sensory system, which parallels auditory pitch perception mechanisms based on purely temporal information where longer inter-pulse intervals receive higher perceptual weights than short intervals [14]. Our study also demonstrates that human perception of stimuli can be determined exclusively by temporal features of spike trains independent of the mean spike rate and without contribution from population response factors.
皮肤振动被触觉感受器感知,对触觉探索过程中对物体属性的感知[1-4]和对物体操作过程中的感觉运动控制[5]有重要贡献。持续的低频皮肤振动(<60 Hz)会引起一种明显的触觉,称为颤动,其频率可以清晰地感知[6]。传入的尖峰活动如何转化为频率感知仍然未知。基于初级体感皮层神经元的平均尖峰率的测量足以解释一些频率辨别任务的表现[7-11];然而,有新的证据表明,刺激也可以基于神经活动的时间特征来区分[12,13]。我们的研究进展在于证明时间特征对于振动触觉频率感知是基本的。脉冲机械刺激被用来在触觉传入中引起特定的时间尖峰序列模式,随后使用心理物理方法来描述人类的频率感知。值得注意的是,决定振动触觉频率的最显著的时间特征不是潜在的周期性,而是连续神经活动爆发之间的静默间隙的持续时间。这种爆发间隙的频率编码代表了一种以前未知的触觉感觉系统中的神经编码形式,它与基于纯时间信息的听觉音高感知机制相似,其中较长的脉冲间间隔比短间隔获得更高的感知权重[14]。我们的研究还表明,人类对刺激的感知可以仅通过尖峰序列的时间特征来确定,而与平均尖峰率无关,并且不受群体反应因素的影响。