Frontiers in Psychology (Dec 2010)

Spatiotemporal integration in somatosensory perception: effects of sensory saltation on pointing at perceived positions on the body surface

  • Jörg Trojan,
  • Annette M Stolle,
  • Annette M Stolle,
  • Antonija Mršić Carl,
  • Antonija Mršić Carl,
  • Dieter Kleinböhl,
  • Hong Z Tan,
  • Rupert Hölzl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2010.00206
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1

Abstract

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In the past, sensory saltation phenomena (Geldard & Sherrick, Science, 1972) have been used repeatedly to analyze the spatiotemporal integration capacity of somatosensory and other sensory mechanisms by means of their psychophysical characteristic. The core phenomenon consists in a systematic mislocalization of one tactile stimulus (the attractee) towards another successive tactile stimulus (the attractant) presented at another location, increasing with shorter intervals. In a series of four experiments, sensory saltation characteristics were studied at the forearm and the abdomen. Participants reported the perceived positions of attractees, attractants, and reference stimuli by pointing at their perceived positions. In general, saltation characteristics compared well to those reported in previous studies, but we were able to gain several new insights regarding this phenomenon: (a) the attractee–attractant interval did not exclusively affect the perceived attractee position, but also the perceived attractant position; (b) saltation characteristics were very similar at different body sites and orientations, but did show differences suggesting anisotropy (direction-dependency) in the underlying integration processes; (c) sensory saltation could be elicited with stimulation patterns crossing the body midline on the abdomen. In addition to the saltation-specific results, our experiments demonstrate that pointing reports of perceived positions on the body surface generally show pronounced systematic biases compared to veridical positions, moderate intraindividual consistency, and a high degree of interindividual variability. Finally, we address methodological and terminological controversies concerning the sensory saltation paradigm and discuss its possible neurophysiological basis.

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