Gating of spontaneous somatic sensations by movement.

Somatosensory & motor research Pub Date : 2014-09-01 Epub Date: 2014-03-05 DOI:10.3109/08990220.2014.888992
Rachel Beaudoin, George A Michael
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

Movement is known to attenuate the perception of tactile stimuli delivered on the moving part of the body, and this gating diminishes the greater the distance from the moving part. However, does it influence the perception of sensations occurring spontaneously without external triggers? In Experiment 1, participants were asked to focus on one hand while moving or not moving their thumb, and thereafter to map and describe the spatial and qualitative attributes of sensations perceived over the remaining, motionless part of the hand. The results show that movement reduces the frequency, spatial extent, and intensity of sensations, but also participants' confidence about their spatial characteristics. As expected, gating decreased the greater the distance from the moving thumb. Furthermore, gating was greater for distal than proximal segments of the hand, suggesting a hierarchical proximo-distal suppression. Experiment 2 ruled out the possibility that these effects were due to tactile sensations elicited by movement. Possible mechanisms of gating in the case of spontaneous sensations are discussed.

通过运动控制自发的躯体感觉。
众所周知,运动可以减弱传递给身体运动部分的触觉刺激的感知,并且距离运动部分越大,这种门控就会减弱。然而,它会影响在没有外部触发的情况下自发产生的感觉的感知吗?在实验1中,参与者被要求在移动或不移动拇指时专注于一只手,然后绘制和描述在手的其余不动部分感知到的感觉的空间和定性属性。结果表明,运动降低了感觉的频率、空间范围和强度,但也降低了参与者对自己空间特征的信心。正如预期的那样,门控与运动拇指的距离越大,门控越小。此外,远端门控比近端门控更大,表明近端-远端抑制是分层的。实验二排除了这些效应是由运动引起的触觉引起的可能性。讨论了在自发感觉情况下可能的门控机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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