Speed invariance of tactile texture perception

被引:31
|
作者
Boundy-Singer, Zoe M. [1 ]
Saal, Hannes P. [2 ]
Bensmaia, Sliman J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Chicago, Dept Organismal Biol & Anat, 1027 E 57th St, Chicago, IL 60637 USA
[2] Univ Sheffield, Dept Psychol, Act Touch Lab, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England
关键词
constancy; psychophysics; touch; ROUGHNESS; SPACE; TOUCH; REPRESENTATIONS; EXPLORATION; PATTERNS; OBJECTS; MONKEY; CODES;
D O I
10.1152/jn.00161.2017
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
The nervous system achieves stable perceptual representations of objects despite large variations in the activity patterns of sensory receptors. Here, we explore perceptual constancy in the sense of touch. Specifically, we investigate the invariance of tactile texture perception across changes in scanning speed. Texture signals in the nerve have been shown to be highly dependent on speed: temporal spiking patterns in nerve fibers that encode fine textural features contract or dilate systematically with increases or decreases in scanning speed, respectively, resulting in concomitant changes in response rate. Nevertheless, texture perception has been shown, albeit with restricted stimulus sets and limited perceptual assays, to be independent of scanning speed. Indeed, previous studies investigated the effect of scanning speed on perceived roughness, only one aspect of texture, often with impoverished stimuli, namely gratings and embossed dot patterns. To fill this gap, we probe the perceptual constancy of a wide range of textures using two different paradigms: one that probes texture perception along well-established sensory dimensions independently and one that probes texture perception as a whole. We find that texture perception is highly stable across scanning speeds, irrespective of the texture or the perceptual assay. Any speed-related effects are dwarfed by differences in percepts evoked by different textures. This remarkable speed invariance of texture perception stands in stark contrast to the strong dependence of the texture responses of nerve fibers on scanning speed. Our results imply neural mechanisms that compensate for scanning speed to achieve stable representations of surface texture. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Our brain forms stable representations of objects regardless of viewpoint, a phenomenon known as invariance that has been described in several sensory modalities. Here, we explore invariance in the sense of touch and show that the tactile perception of texture does not depend on scanning speed. This perceptual constancy implies neural mechanisms that extract information about texture from the response of nerve fibers such that the resulting neural representation is stable across speeds.
引用
收藏
页码:2371 / 2377
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Bodily Sensation and Tactile Perception
    Richardson, Louise
    PHILOSOPHY AND PHENOMENOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2013, 86 (01) : 134 - 154
  • [42] Tactile stimulation disambiguates the perception of visual motion paths
    Meyerhoff, Hauke S.
    Merz, Simon
    Frings, Christian
    PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2018, 25 (06) : 2231 - 2237
  • [43] Anisotropy in tactile time perception
    Hidaka, Souta
    Tame, Luigi
    Zafarana, Antonio
    Longo, Matthew R.
    CORTEX, 2020, 128 : 124 - 131
  • [44] A tactile sensor using single layer graphene for surface texture recognition
    Chun, Sungwoo
    Choi, Yeonhai
    Suh, Dong Ik
    Bae, Gi Yoon
    Hyun, Sangil
    Park, Wanjun
    NANOSCALE, 2017, 9 (29) : 10248 - 10255
  • [45] Contact Force and Duration Effects on Static and Dynamic Tactile Texture Discrimination
    Kwok, Hoi Fei
    Darkins, Kerry
    Oddo, Calogero M.
    Beccai, Lucia
    Wing, Alan M.
    HAPTICS: GENERATING AND PERCEIVING TANGIBLE SENSATIONS, PT II, PROCEEDINGS, 2010, 6192 : 9 - +
  • [46] Tactile perception of the roughness of 3D-printed textures
    Tymms, Chelsea
    Zorin, Denis
    Gardner, Esther P.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2018, 119 (03) : 862 - 876
  • [47] Effect of Finger Sliding Direction on Tactile Perception, Friction and Dynamics
    Zhou, Xue
    Mo, Ji Liang
    Li, Yi Yuan
    Xiang, Zai Yu
    Yang, Dan
    Masen, Marc A.
    Jin, Zhong Min
    TRIBOLOGY LETTERS, 2020, 68 (03)
  • [48] Segmenting the body into parts: Evidence from biases in tactile perception
    de Vignemont, Frederique
    Majid, Asifa
    Jola, Corinne
    Haggard, Patrick
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2009, 62 (03) : 500 - 512
  • [49] The roles of lower- and higher-order surface statistics in tactile texture perception
    Kuroki, Scinob
    Sawayama, Masataka
    Nishida, Shin'ya
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2021, 126 (01) : 95 - 111
  • [50] Perceptual Constancy of Texture Roughness in the Tactile System
    Yoshioka, Takashi
    Craig, James C.
    Beck, Graham C.
    Hsiao, Steven S.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2011, 31 (48) : 17603 - 17611