DocumentCode :
1342505
Title :
Haptic Interaction of Touch and Proprioception: Implications for Neuroprosthetics
Author :
Rincon-Gonzalez, Liliana ; Warren, Jay P. ; Meller, David M. ; Tillery, Stephen Helms
Author_Institution :
Harrington Program in Biomed. Eng., Arizona State Univ., Tempe, AZ, USA
Volume :
19
Issue :
5
fYear :
2011
Firstpage :
490
Lastpage :
500
Abstract :
Somatosensation is divided into multiple discrete modalities that we think of separably: e.g., tactile, proprioceptive, and temperature sensation. However, in processes such as haptics, those modalities all interact. If one intended to artificially generate a sensation that could be used for stereognosis, for example, it would be crucial to understand these interactions. We are presently examining the relationship between tactile and proprioceptive modalities in this context. In this overview of some of our recent work, we show that signals that would normally be attributed to two of these systems separately, tactile contact and self-movement, interact both perceptually and physiologically in ways that complicate the understanding of haptic processing. In the first study described here, we show that a tactile illusion on the fingertips, the cutaneous rabbit effect, can be abolished by changing the posture of the fingers. We then discuss activity in primary somatosensory cortical neurons illustrating the interrelationship of tactile and postural signals. In this study, we used a robot-enhanced virtual environment to show that many neurons in primary somatosensory cortex with cutaneous receptive fields encode elements both of tactile contact and self-motion. We then show the results of studies examining the structure of the process which extracts the spatial location of the hand from proprioceptive signals. The structure of the spatial errors in these maps indicates that the proprioceptive-spatial map is stable but individually constructed. These seemingly disparate studies lead us to suggest that tactile sensation is encoded in a 2-D map, but one which undergoes continual dynamic modification by an underlying proprioceptive map. Understanding how the disparate signals that comprise the somatosensory system are processed to produce sensation is an important step in realizing the kind of seamless integration aspired to in neuroprosthetics.
Keywords :
neurophysiology; prosthetics; touch (physiological); virtual reality; continual dynamic modification; cutaneous rabbit effect; fingertips; haptic interaction; neurons; neuroprosthetics; proprioception; robot-enhanced virtual environment; self-movement; somatosensation; stereognosis; tactile illusion; touch; Fingers; Firing; Haptic interfaces; Indexes; Neurons; Rabbits; Silicon; Muscle sense; prosthetics; somatosensation; tactile; Animals; Fingers; Humans; Posture; Proprioception; Prostheses and Implants; Prosthesis Design; Robotics; Somatosensory Cortex; Touch;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1534-4320
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TNSRE.2011.2166808
Filename :
6035987
Link To Document :
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