On the contribution of overt tactile expectations to visuo-tactile interactions within the peripersonal space

Publication date

2017-08

Authors

Kandula, MISNI 0000000506013934
van der Stoep, N.ORCID 0000-0002-0412-2078ISNI 0000000492960809
Hofman, DennisISNI 0000000388027306
Dijkerman, ChrisISNI 0000000392909504

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Since the discovery of neural regions in the monkey brain that respond preferentially to multisensory stimuli presented in proximal space, researchers have been studying this specialised spatial representation in humans. It has been demonstrated that approaching auditory or visual stimuli modulate tactile processing, while they are within the peripersonal space (PPS). The aim of the current study is to investigate the additional effects of tactile expectation on the PPS-related multisensory interactions. Based on the output of a computational simulation, we expected that as tactile expectation increases rapidly during the course of the motion of the visual stimulus, the outcome RT curves would mask the multisensory contribution of PPS. When the tactile expectation remains constant during the motion, the PPS-related spatially selective multisensory processes become apparent. The behavioural results on human experiments followed the pattern predicted by the simulation. That is, rapidly changing levels of tactile expectation, caused by dynamic visual stimuli, masks the outcome of the multisensory processes within peripersonal space. This indicates that both PPS-related multisensory interactions and tactile expectations play an important role in anticipating and responding to interactions with the body.

Keywords

peripersonal space, overt tactile expectation, vision, touch, Multisensory integration

Citation

Kandula, M, Van der Stoep, N, Hofman, D & Dijkerman, H C 2017, 'On the contribution of overt tactile expectations to visuo-tactile interactions within the peripersonal space', Experimental Brain Research, vol. 235, no. 8, pp. 2511-2522. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-017-4965-9