4.0 Article

Spatial summation in the tactile sensory system:: Probability summation and neural integration

Journal

SOMATOSENSORY AND MOTOR RESEARCH
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 255-268

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/08990220500420236

Keywords

somatosensation; tactile sensitivity; spatial summation; mechanoreception; neural integration; probability summation; Pacinian corpuscles

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Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [R01NS38661] Funding Source: Medline

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Psychophysical thresholds for the detection of a 300-Hz burst of vibration applied to the thenar eminence were measured for stimuli applied to the skin through 1.5 cm(2) and through 0.05 cm(2) contactors. Thresholds were approximately 13 dB lower when the area of the contactor was 1.5 cm(2) than when it was 0.05 cm(2). The difference between the thresholds measured with the large and small contactors was significantly reduced when only the lowest thresholds obtained in the testing sessions were considered. This result supports the hypothesis that one component of spatial summation in the P channel is probability summation. In addition, threshold measurements within a session were less variable when measured with the 1.5 cm(2) contactor. We conclude that spatial summation in the P channel is a joint function of two processes that occur as the areal extent of the stimulus increases: probability summation in which the probability of exceeding the psychophysical detection threshold increases as the number of receptors of varying sensitivities increases, and neural integration in which neural activity originating from separate receptors is combined within the central nervous system rendering the channel more sensitive to the stimulus.

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