它真的在你手上吗?自发感觉并非外周感觉--来自健全人和一名幻肢综合症患者的证据。

IF 2.2 3区 心理学 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES
Sara Salgues , Gaën Plancher , George A. Michael
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在其他身体信号中,对皮肤在没有外部触发的情况下自发产生的感觉的感知有助于身体意识的形成。自发感觉(SPS)是最近才出现在文献中的话题,目前仍在争论这种现象是由触觉基础的外周皮肤单元活动引起的,还是直接源于中枢机制。在第一个实验中,我们认为如果 SPS 依赖于外周传入,那么它们在无毛手的感知应该与手的触觉灵敏度有关。相反,我们发现两者之间没有任何关系,这让我们设想了在没有皮肤单元的情况下出现 SPS 的情景。在第二个实验中,我们介绍了朱莉的案例,她是一名右手截肢者,能够感知并报告幻肢综合症引起的 SPS。我们发现,幻肢上的 SPS 分布与在对照组参与者身上观察到的 SPS 分布遵循相同的梯度,这与在完好左手上感知到的 SPS 不同。这些发现对于理解通过SPS感知决定身体意识的神经因素至关重要,并为躯体综合症背后存在的精确神经梯度提供了见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Is it really on your hand? Spontaneous sensations are not peripheral sensations – Evidence from able-bodied individuals and a phantom limb syndrome patient

Among other bodily signals, the perception of sensations arising spontaneously on the skin with no external triggers contributes to body awareness. The topic of spontaneous sensations (SPS) being quite recent in the literature, there is still a debate whether this phenomenon is elicited by peripheral cutaneous units’ activity underlying tactile perception or originates directly from central mechanisms. In a first experiment, we figured that, if SPS depended on peripheral afferents, their perception on the glabrous hand should relate to the hand tactile sensitivity. On the contrary, we found no relationship at all, which led us to envisage the scenario of SPS in the absence of cutaneous units. In a second experiment, we present the case of Julie, a right-hand amputee that could perceive and report SPS arising on her phantom limb syndrome. We found that SPS distribution on the phantom limb followed the same gradient as that observed in control participants, unlike SPS perceived on the intact left hand. Those findings are crucial to the understanding of neural factors determining body awareness through SPS perception and provide insights into the existence of a precise neural gradient underlying somesthesis.

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来源期刊
Brain and Cognition
Brain and Cognition 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
46
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Brain and Cognition is a forum for the integration of the neurosciences and cognitive sciences. B&C publishes peer-reviewed research articles, theoretical papers, case histories that address important theoretical issues, and historical articles into the interaction between cognitive function and brain processes. The focus is on rigorous studies of an empirical or theoretical nature and which make an original contribution to our knowledge about the involvement of the nervous system in cognition. Coverage includes, but is not limited to memory, learning, emotion, perception, movement, music or praxis in relationship to brain structure or function. Published articles will typically address issues relating some aspect of cognitive function to its neurological substrates with clear theoretical import, formulating new hypotheses or refuting previously established hypotheses. Clinical papers are welcome if they raise issues of theoretical importance or concern and shed light on the interaction between brain function and cognitive function. We welcome review articles that clearly contribute a new perspective or integration, beyond summarizing the literature in the field; authors of review articles should make explicit where the contribution lies. We also welcome proposals for special issues on aspects of the relation between cognition and the structure and function of the nervous system. Such proposals can be made directly to the Editor-in-Chief from individuals interested in being guest editors for such collections.
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