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Published in: Experimental Brain Research 2/2011

01-04-2011 | Research Article

A critical speed for gating of tactile detection during voluntary movement

Authors: Anita Cybulska-Klosowicz, El-Mehdi Meftah, Mélissa Raby, Marie-Line Lemieux, C. Elaine Chapman

Published in: Experimental Brain Research | Issue 2/2011

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Abstract

This study addressed the paradoxical observation that movement is essential for tactile exploration, and yet is accompanied by movement-related gating or suppression of tactile detection. Knowing that tactile gating covaries with the speed of movement (faster movements, more gating), we hypothesized that there would be no tactile gating at slower speeds of movement, corresponding to speeds commonly used during tactile exploration (<200 mm/s). Subjects (n = 21) detected the presence or absence of a weak electrical stimulus applied to the skin of the right middle finger during two conditions: rest and active elbow extension. Movement speed was systematically varied from 50 to ~1,000 mm/s. No subject showed evidence of tactile gating at the slowest speed tested, 50 mm/s (rest versus movement), but all subjects showed decreased detection at one or more higher speeds. For each subject, we calculated the critical speed, corresponding to the speed at which detection fell to 0.5 (chance). The mean critical speed was 472 mm/s and >200 mm/s in almost all subjects (19/21). This result is consistent with our hypothesis that subjects optimize the speed of movement during tactile exploration to avoid speeds associated with tactile gating. This strategy thus maximizes the quality of the tactile feedback generated during tactile search and improves perception.
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Metadata
Title
A critical speed for gating of tactile detection during voluntary movement
Authors
Anita Cybulska-Klosowicz
El-Mehdi Meftah
Mélissa Raby
Marie-Line Lemieux
C. Elaine Chapman
Publication date
01-04-2011
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Experimental Brain Research / Issue 2/2011
Print ISSN: 0014-4819
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1106
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-011-2632-0

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