Department of Neuroscience and Movement Science, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland.
Department of Basic Neurosciences, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Nat Commun. 2021 Sep 9;12(1):5336. doi: 10.1038/s41467-021-25476-9.
We live surrounded by vibrations generated by moving objects. These oscillatory stimuli propagate through solid substrates, are sensed by mechanoreceptors in our body and give rise to perceptual attributes such as vibrotactile pitch (i.e. the perception of how high or low a vibration's frequency is). Here, we establish a mechanistic relationship between vibrotactile pitch perception and the physical properties of vibrations using behavioral tasks, in which vibratory stimuli were delivered to the human fingertip or the mouse forelimb. The resulting perceptual reports were analyzed with a model demonstrating that physically different combinations of vibration frequencies and amplitudes can produce equal pitch perception. We found that the perceptually indistinguishable but physically different stimuli follow a common computational principle in mouse and human. It dictates that vibrotactile pitch perception is shifted with increases in amplitude toward the frequency of highest vibrotactile sensitivity. These findings suggest the existence of a fundamental relationship between the seemingly unrelated concepts of spectral sensitivity and pitch perception.
我们生活在运动物体产生的振动环境中。这些振荡刺激通过固体基质传播,被我们身体中的机械感受器感知,并产生振动触觉音高(即感知振动频率的高低)等感知属性。在这里,我们使用行为任务在人类指尖或小鼠前肢上施加振动刺激,在机械振动触觉音高感知与振动物理特性之间建立了一种机制关系。对产生的感知报告进行分析的模型表明,振动频率和幅度的物理不同组合可以产生相同的音高感知。我们发现,在小鼠和人类中,虽然感觉上无法区分但物理上不同的刺激遵循一个共同的计算原则。它规定,随着振幅的增加,振动触觉音高感知会向振动触觉灵敏度最高的频率转移。这些发现表明,在光谱灵敏度和音高感知这两个看似不相关的概念之间存在着基本关系。