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Touch

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Touch. The Skin. Functions: Provides tactile information. Warns us of damaging stimuli. Contains body fluids and organs. Protects against bacteria. Regulates body temperature. Touch. Touch helps us identify objects and provides unique information (e.g., texture) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Touch

Touch

Page 2: Touch

Functions:Functions:

Provides tactile information.

Warns us of damaging stimuli.

Contains body fluids and organs.

Protects against bacteria.

Regulates body temperature.

The Skin

Page 3: Touch

Touch

Touch helps us identify objects and provides unique information (e.g., texture)

Touch is important in development and social interaction (e.g., Harlow’s monkeys).

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The skin on the hand contains thousands of pressure-sensitive mechanoreceptors.

Touch acuity is best when fingers move over the object of interest.

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Measuring sensitivity and acuity of touch

Pressure sensitivity is greatest for fingertips and lips (the lightest touch). The back is least sensitive to pressure.Females more sensitive than males.

Vibrotactile sensitivity is greatest for palms. Females are more sensitive than males.

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Touch acuity (pattern acuity) is measured using the two-point threshold test.

Measuring sensitivity and acuity of touch

Tactile contrast sensitivity.

Spatial frequency

Sens

itiv

ity

Linked to centre/surround receptive fields in the thalamus.

Braille.

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Neural Processing for Touch

Receptive field sizes of the different mechanoreceptors determines our ability to discriminate fine details.

Sensitive body parts have higher density of RA1 and SA1 fibers.

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Receptive Fields

Receptive fields in the thalamusthalamus have centre-surround organization.

Cortical receptive fields (left)Cortical receptive fields (left) are smaller in the fingers and larger on the hand and forearm.

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Neural Processing for TouchTwo-point threshold:Two-point threshold: the smallest discriminable

distance between two points

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Localization of tactile stimulation

Localization ability enables judgment of where stimulus has been applied to the skin.

Tactile judgments of relative position are highly accurate.

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Perception of surface texture

Surfaces have unique “texture signatures” (e.g., coarse vs. fine).

Gratings of different spatial frequencies measure tactile acuity.

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Tactile sensitivity (temperature)

Touch temperature is the perception of surface temperature.

Objects differ in thermal conductivity.

Touch temperature is based on temperature gradient between object and skin.

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Thermoreceptors

Located just below the skin.

Continuous nerve impulses at a certain temperature.

Small receptive fields (less than 1mm2).

There are spaces between receptive fields (“blind spots”).

Two classes: (1) cold receptors (2) warm receptors

Responds to CHANGES in temperature!!!!

Perceived temperature depends on the state of the receptors.

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Thermoreceptors

Warm Fibers:Warm Fibers:

- increased responding with increasing temperature- sustained firing- decreased firing when temperature decreases- do not respond to mechanical stimulation

Cold Fibers:Cold Fibers:

- increased responding with decreasing temperature- sustained firing- decreased firing when temperature increases- do not respond to mechanical stimulation

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Mental set and tactile sensitivity

Uncertainty makes tactile discrimination more difficult.

Advance information improves the identification of a tactile stimulus.

Practice also improves tactile discrimination.

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Touch FibersEach nerve fiber signals touch to a specific area of the

skin (the fiber’s receptive field).

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Temporal properties

Slowly adapting (SA) fibers respond to initial stimulation and continue responding (perception of light, uniform pressure).

Rapidly adapting (RA) fibers respond only to start and stop points of stimulation (perception of buzzing vibration).

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Spatial properties

Punctate fibers have small receptive fields with sharply defined boundaries.

Diffuse fibers have large receptive fields with fuzzy boundaries.

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The four-channel model: Mechanoreceptors

Spatial PropertyPunctate Diffuse

Tem

por

al P

rop

erty

RA

SA

Meissnercorpuscles

(transient stimulation)

Paciniancorpuscles

(very sensitive with large RFs)

Merkeldisks

(steady pressure of small object)

Ruffiniendings

(steady pressure and stretching)

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ReceptorsFrequency

RangePerception Fiber RF Size

MerkelMerkel0.3-3 Hz Pressure SA1 Small

MeissnerMeissner3-40 Hz Flutter RA1 Small

RuffiniRuffini15-400 Hz Stretching SA2 Large

PacinianPacinian10-500 Hz Vibration RA2 Large

Properties of Mechanoreceptors

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Ascending pathways for touch

Fibers (receptors) spinal cord

interneurons muscle

Fibers (receptors)

lemniscal neurons brainstem

spinal cord

Reflex (OUCH!!!!)

Sensory Analysis

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Somatosensory Cortex

Damage to somatosensory cortex destroys ability to recognize objects by touch.

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The body is mapped topographically onto somatosensory cortex, but body parts are not represented equally.

Homoculus

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Homunculi

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Tactile Object Recognition

Haptic perception: Haptic perception: exploration of 3D objects with the hand

Exploratory proceduresExploratory procedures (Lederman & Klatzky)

Passive Touch Passive Touch vs. Active Touch Active Touch

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Exploratory Procedures

http://psyc.queensu.ca/~cheryl/labpage.htmlhttp://psyc.queensu.ca/~cheryl/labpage.html

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Visual and Haptic Object Recognition

Amedi, Jacobson, Hendler, Malach and Zohary (2002). Cerebral Cortex, 12(11), 1202-1212

Haptic perception:Haptic perception: involves coordination of motor, sensory, and cognitive systems

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Somatosensory Cortex

Certain cortical neurons respond selectively to orientation and direction.

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A person with unilateral neglect denies ownership of limbs on one side of the body.

A person with a phantom limb experiences sensation from a limb that no longer exists.

Disorders related to somatosensory cortex

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Phantom Limbs

Flor, Elbert, Wienbruch, Pantev, Knecht, Birbaumer, Larbig & Taub (1995).

Amputees often report that they can still feel their missing limb, and sometimes this is painful!

Referred sensation:Referred sensation: stimulation of one part of the body results in a sensation on another part of the body (i.e. the phantom limb).

The amount of functional cortical reorganization is positively correlated with the degree of phantom limb pain.

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Pain perception

Nociceptors respond to painful stimuli.

Two categories:(1) mechanical receptor

- severe pressure on skin- tearing

(2) thermal receptor- responds to very high and very low temperatures

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Pain

Nociceptors:Nociceptors: receptors in the skin that respond to

intense pressure, extreme temperature, or burning

chemicals.

http://www.sfn.org/content/Publications/BrainBriefings/pain.html

The perception of pain can be modulated by cognitive factors:expectation, placebo, shifting attention, emotional distraction,

individual differences

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Endorphins, Opiates and Pain Relief

The “reward pathway” contains opioid receptors for exogenous and endogenous substances.

- neurotransmitters (dopamine)- opiate drugs (morphine, heroin, cocaine)- endorphins

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Somatosensory cortex plasticity

Cortical reorganization occurs in monkeys when fingers are surgically connected.

PET studies reveal differences in the brains of musicians that suggest somatosensory cortical

changes occur in humans.

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Cortical Plasticity

The amount of cortical magnification was correlated with the age at which the person began to play.

Elbert, Pantev, Wienbruch, Rockstroh & Taub (1995)

String instrument players have larger representation in primary sensory cortex for their left hands than normal controls.

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Cross-Modal Plasticity

Cohen, Celnik, Pascual-Leone, Corwell, Faiz, Dambrosia, Honda, Sadato, Gerloff, Catala & Hallett (1997).

People who have been blind from a very young age show activity in visual cortex during Braille reading.

A TMS pulse to the visual cortex impaired Braille reading.

Evidence of functional reorganization of the brain!

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Summary• The homuculus describes the amount of cortex

devoted to processing sensory and motor information from the different parts of the body.

• Haptic perception results from active touch and exploratory hand movements.

• Haptic and visual object recognition share an overlapping region in the ventral “what” visual stream.

• Nociceptors provide information about painful stimuli.

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• Central neural mechanisms, such as emotional state and drugs, modulate our perception of pain.

• The somatosensory system can undergo substantial reorganization after intensive practice and injury.