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Journal ArticleDOI

Tactile distance anisotropy on the feet.

TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigated tactile distance anisotropy on the foot, a body part structurally and embryologically similar to the hand, but with very different patterns of functional usage in humans.
Abstract
Perception of distance between two touches varies with orientation on the hand, with distances aligned with hand width perceived as larger than those aligned with hand length. Similar anisotropies are found on other body parts (e.g., the face), suggesting they may reflect a general feature of tactile organization, but appear absent on other body parts (e.g., the belly). Here, we investigated tactile-distance anisotropy on the foot, a body part structurally and embryologically similar to the hand, but with very different patterns of functional usage in humans. In three experiments, we compared the perceived distance between pairs of touches aligned with the medio-lateral and proximal-distal foot axes. On the hairy skin of the foot dorsum, anisotropy was consistently found, with distances aligned with the medio-lateral foot axis perceived as larger than those in the proximo-distal axis. In contrast, on the glabrous skin of the sole, inconsistent results were found across experiments, with no overall evidence for anisotropy. This shows a pattern of anisotropy on the foot broadly similar to that on the hand, adding to the list of body parts showing tactile-distance anisotropy, and providing further evidence that such biases are a general aspect of tactile spatial organization across the body. Significance: The perception of tactile distance has been widely used to understand the spatial structure of touch. On the hand, anisotropy of tactile distance perception is well established, with distances oriented across hand width perceived larger than those oriented along hand length. We investigated tactile-distance anisotropy on the feet, a body part structurally, genetically, and developmentally homologous to the hands, but with strikingly different patterns of functional usage. We report highly similar patterns of anisotropy on the hairy skin of the hand dorsum and foot dorsum. This suggests that anisotropy arises from the general organization of touch across the body.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Distortion of mental body representations

TL;DR: The authors found that distortions of body representations are also common in healthy individuals and occur in domains including tactile spatial perception, proprioception, and the conscious body image, suggesting that these conditions may relate to dysfunction of mechanisms for body perception.
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No evidence for sex differences in tactile distance anisotropy

TL;DR: In this article , the authors measured tactile distance anisotropy on the hand dorsum in both women and men, with no evidence for any sex difference in the results of 24 experiments, conducted by myself and my colleagues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Size Constancy Mechanisms: Empirical Evidence from Touch

TL;DR: It is suggested that a lateral inhibition mechanism, when an object touches the skin, provides information through the distribution of the inhibitory subfields of the RF about the shape of the tactile RF itself, which allows an effective tactile size compensatory mechanism where a good match between the physical and perceptual dimensions of the object is achieved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Similar tactile distance anisotropy across segments of the arm

Kai-Chien Chang, +1 more
- 30 Mar 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated tactile distance perception across the arm, measuring anisotropy on the upper arm, forearm, and hand dorsum, and found no apparent difference in the magnitude of anisotropic across segments of the arm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring Tactile Distance Perception

Dini Nurul Nazhifah
- 01 Jan 2023 - 
TL;DR: In the past 15 years, tactile distance has become increasingly popular among researchers due to their connections with basic aspects of somatosensory neurophysiology, higher-level aspects of mental body representation, and relation to clinical disorders as discussed by the authors .
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