Center for Neuroprosthetics, School of Life Sciences, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Campus Biotech H4, Chemin des Mines 9, Geneva, CH - 1202, Switzerland.
Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience, Brain Mind Institute, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Geneva, Switzerland.
Eur J Neurosci. 2018 Apr;47(7):800-811. doi: 10.1111/ejn.13872.
Human-environment interactions are mediated through the body and occur within the peripersonal space (PPS), the space immediately adjacent to and surrounding the body. The PPS is taken to be a critical interface between the body and the environment, and indeed, body-part specific PPS remapping has been shown to depend on body-part utilization, such as upper limb movements in otherwise static observers. How vestibular signals induced by whole-body movement contribute to PPS representation is less well understood. In a series of experiments, we mapped the spatial extension of the PPS around the head while participants were submitted to passive whole-body rotations inducing vestibular stimulation. Forty-six participants, in three experiments, executed a tactile detection reaction time task while task-irrelevant auditory stimuli approached them. The maximal distance at which the auditory stimulus facilitated tactile reaction time was taken as a proxy for the boundary of peri-head space. The present results indicate two distinct vestibular effects. First, vestibular stimulation speeded tactile detection indicating a vestibular facilitation of somatosensory processing. Second, vestibular stimulation modulated audio-tactile interaction of peri-head space in a rotation direction-specific manner. Congruent but not incongruent audio-vestibular motion stimuli expanded the PPS boundary further away from the body as compared to no rotation. These results show that vestibular inputs dynamically update the multisensory delineation of PPS and far space, which may serve to maintain accurate tracking of objects close to the body and to update spatial self-representations.
人类与环境的相互作用是通过身体进行的,并发生在近体空间(PPS)内,即紧邻和环绕身体的空间。PPS 被认为是身体和环境之间的关键界面,实际上,已经证明身体特定部位的 PPS 重新映射取决于身体部位的利用,例如在静止观察者中进行上肢运动。全身运动引起的前庭信号如何有助于 PPS 表示,这一点还不太清楚。在一系列实验中,我们在参与者接受诱导前庭刺激的全身被动旋转时,绘制了头部周围 PPS 的空间扩展。在三个实验中,有 46 名参与者执行了触觉检测反应时间任务,同时与任务无关的听觉刺激向他们靠近。听觉刺激促进触觉反应时间的最大距离被用作peri-head 空间边界的代理。目前的结果表明存在两种不同的前庭效应。首先,前庭刺激加快了触觉检测,表明前庭对躯体感觉处理有促进作用。其次,前庭刺激以旋转方向特异性的方式调节了peri-head 空间的听觉-触觉相互作用。与没有旋转相比,一致但不一致的听觉-前庭运动刺激会将 PPS 边界扩展到更远的身体之外。这些结果表明,前庭输入动态更新 PPS 和远场的多感觉描绘,这可能有助于准确跟踪靠近身体的物体,并更新空间自我表示。