scholarly journals Somatosensory Integration and Masking of Complex Tactile Information: Peripheral and Cortical Contributions

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 954
Author(s):  
Steven R. Passmore ◽  
Niyousha Mortaza ◽  
Cheryl M. Glazebrook ◽  
Bernadette Murphy ◽  
Timothy D. Lee

Nerve paresthesia is a sensory impairment experienced in clinical conditions such as diabetes. Paresthesia may “mask” or “compete” with meaningful tactile information in the patient’s sensory environment. The two objectives of the present study were: (1) to determine if radiating paresthesia produces a peripheral mask, a central mask, or a combination; (2) to determine if a response competition experimental design reveals changes in somatosensory integration similar to a masking design. Experiment 1 assessed the degree of masking caused by induced radiating ulnar nerve paresthesia (a concurrent non-target stimulus) on a vibrotactile Morse code letter acquisition task using both behavioral and neurophysiological measures. Experiment 2 used a response competition design by moving the radiating paresthesia to the median nerve. This move shifted the concurrent non-target stimulus to a location spatially removed from the target stimuli. The task, behavioral and neurophysiological measures remained consistent. The induced paresthesia impacted letter acquisition differentially depending on the relative location of meaningful and non-meaningful stimulation. Paresthesia acted as a peripheral mask when presented to overlapping anatomical stimulation areas, and a central mask when presented at separate anatomical areas. These findings are discussed as they relate to masking, subcortical, and centripetal gating.

Author(s):  
Peter Wühr ◽  
Christian Frings ◽  
Herbert Heuer

Abstract. We tested the hypothesis that selective response preparation, based on reliable response cues, reduces response conflict in an Eriksen flanker task. Previous studies of this issue produced inconclusive results because presenting an always valid response cue before the stimulus display turns a choice-response task into a simple-response task, in which full processing of the actual stimulus display is no longer necessary. We conducted two experiments in which we matched stimulus processing in conditions without cues and with reliable cues as far as possible. In both experiments, we presented a nogo target stimulus in 25% of the trials. The different cueing conditions were presented in separate blocks in Experiment 1 but mixed within blocks in Experiment 2. The most important result was the reduction of response conflict as induced by incompatible flanker stimuli in both experiments with reliable response cues. This finding supports the notion of a negative preparation-interference relationship.


Author(s):  
Wenbo Huang ◽  
Changyuan Wang ◽  
Hongbo Jia

Tactile sensing has recently been used in pattern recognition technology for pilots’ posture information and environmental information. Human tactile sensing is limited, however, through control of the spatial distribution and vibration intensity of each contact in the tactile stimulation array, the accuracy, convenience, and comfort of the tactile device can be comprehensively improved. Moreover, the recognition rate of most current flight posture information methods is low. In this paper, the principle of vibration haptic coding is optimized. A combined coding scheme of “vibration [Formula: see text] sequence” is used to recognize pilot’s flight posture. A novel triangular coding scheme is proposed for the first time. Compared to other commonly used coding schemes such as “needle scheme“ and “rectangle scheme”, experimental results show that the triangular coding scheme is 1.5% more accuracy with response time reduced by nearly 1.25s in recognition pilots’ flight posture information.


Author(s):  
Nachshon Meiran ◽  
Ziv Chorev

Abstract. Participants switched between two randomly ordered discrimination tasks and each trial began with the presentation of a task cue instructing which task to execute. The authors induced phasic alertness by presenting a salient uninformative stimulus after the task cue was provided, and at variable intervals before the target stimulus was presented (Experiments 1-3) or before the task cue (Experiment 4). When the alerting stimulus preceded the target stimulus or the task cue by an optimal interval, RT was faster, indicating an alert state and the task-switching cost was reduced. These results support the suggestion of De Jong (Acta Psychologica, 1999 ) that alertness improves the overcoming of retrieval competition through improved goal representation, but also show that the effect is specific to the residual task-switching cost.


2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Torralbo ◽  
Paige Scalf ◽  
Diane Beck ◽  
Arthur F. Kramer

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