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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The responses of afferent fibres from the glabrous skin of the hand during voluntary finger movements in man.

M Hulliger, +3 more
- 01 Jun 1979 - 
- Vol. 291, Iss: 1, pp 233-249
TLDR
Afferent activity of 111 single units from the glabrous skin area was recorded percutaneously in the median nerve of human subjects, using tungsten electrodes, with possible implications for kinaesthesia and motor control.
Abstract
1. Afferent activity of 111 single units from the glabrous skin area was recorded percutaneously in the median nerve of human subjects, using tungsten electrodes. 2. The majority of the units (103) were classified as low-threshold mechano-sensitive units belonging to one of the four categories previously described: rapidly adapting with small receptive fields (RA), rapidly adapting with large receptive fields (PC, presumed Pacinian corpuscle units), slowly adapting with small fields (SA I), and slowly adapting with large fields (SA II). The size of the responses (in number of impulses) to indentation and stretching of the skin was compared with that of the responses elicited during voluntary isotonic finger movements, which avoided trivial excitation of the units by direct touch. 3. All four types of units, and 77% of the single units, were activated by isotonic movements. The decreasing order of responsiveness was PC, SA II, SA I, RA. 4. Almost all responsive units were excited during the dynamic phase of ramp and smooth oscillatory movements. Static responses, on the other hand, occurred only with 50% of the slowly adapting units, corresponding to a third of the total sample (SA II, 81%; SA I, 17%. 5. For all four types of units the dynamic responses to movements were of similar size as the responses to localized skin indentation with a von Frey hair at five times threshold. 6. The results are discussed with regard to the possible implications for kinaesthesia and motor control.

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Citations
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Journal Article

Properties of cutaneous mechanoreceptors in the human hand related to touch sensation.

TL;DR: The relationship between the stimulus amplitude and perceived intensity during sustained skin indentations did not match the corresponding stimulus response functions of SA units suggesting non-linear transformations within the central nervous system.
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Signals in tactile afferents from the fingers eliciting adaptive motor responses during precision grip.

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that signals in tactile afferent units are utilized in the adaptation of the force coordination to the frictional condition while human subjects lift small objects using the precision grip between the tips of the fingers.
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Speech Perception By Ear and Eye: A Paradigm for Psychological Inquiry

TL;DR: In this paper, the processing of information in face-to-face communication when a speaker makes both audible and visible information available to a perceiver is discussed. But the evaluation of the information source provides information about the strength of alternative interpretations, rather than just all-or-none categorical information, as claimed by "categorical perception" theory.
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Integration in Spinal Neuronal Systems

TL;DR: The sections in this article are: Methodological Considerations, General Summary and Epilogue, Ascending Pathways that Monitor Segmental Interneuronal Activity, and Evidence That Ascending FRA Pathways Monitor Activity in interneurons of Reflex Pathways.
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Tactile sensory coding in the glabrous skin of the human hand

TL;DR: The human hand and the brain are close partners in two important and closely interconnected functions, i.e. to explore the physical world and to reshape selected segments of it according to man's intentions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Tactile sensibility in the human hand: relative and absolute densities of four types of mechanoreceptive units in glabrous skin.

TL;DR: The spatial distribution of densities supports the idea that the RA and SA I units account for spatial acuity in psychophysical tests, which is known to increase in distal direction along the hand.
Journal ArticleDOI

The sense of flutter-vibration: comparison of the human capacity with response patterns of mechanoreceptive afferents from the monkey hand.

TL;DR: This paper combines two experimental of the first importance for sensory neurophysdesigns which differ remarkably in method, iology, for they establish the dynamic and in their historical and conceptual derange required of the input on the afferent side of the system to account for the output-the measured sensory capacities.
Journal ArticleDOI

The structure and function of a slowly adapting touch corpuscle in hairy skin

A. Iggo, +1 more
TL;DR: Slowly adapting cutaneous mechanoreceptors, in the cat and primates, have been studied by histological and neurophysiological methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Activity from skin mechanoreceptors recorded percutaneously in awake human subjects.

TL;DR: A technique is described which allows recording of multi-fiber discharge and single-unit activity from intact peripheral nerves of awake human subjects and it was possible to judge when afferent nerve fibers of cutaneous origin lay close to the electrode tip by the quality of the insertion paresthesias and the type of peripheral stimuli required to induce afferent responses.
Journal ArticleDOI

The structure and function of the slowly adapting type II mechanoreceptor in hairy skin.

TL;DR: The slowly adapting type II mechanoreceptor in hairy skin of the cat was studied in detail using histological and neurophysiological methods to study the response to vertical displacement and directionally sensitive to skin stretch.
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