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Transfer of the curvature aftereffect in dynamic touch.

TLDR
The existence and intermanual transfer of curvature aftereffects for dynamic touch were investigated and it is concluded that the representation of object information depends on the exploration mode that is used to acquire information.
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This article is published in Neuropsychologia.The article was published on 2008-10-01 and is currently open access. It has received 21 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Curvature.

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Tactile and Haptic Illusions

TL;DR: This paper surveys the research literature on robust tactile and haptic illusions by briefly considering a number of important general themes that have emerged in the materials surveyed.
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Human perception of shape from touch

TL;DR: The role of active touch in three aspects of shape perception and discrimination studies is focused on, and the presence of strong after-effects after just briefly touching a shape is addressed.
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Adaptation aftereffects reveal that tactile distance is a basic somatosensory feature

TL;DR: The nature of the aftereffects are investigated, demonstrating that they are orientation- and skin-region–specific, occur even when just one hand is adapted, do not transfer either contralaterally or across the palm and dorsum, and are defined in a skin-centered, rather than an external, reference frame.
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Tactual perception: a review of experimental variables and procedures

TL;DR: An organised overview of the main variables in touch experiments is presented, compiling aspects reported in the tactual literature, and attempting to provide both a summary of previous findings, and a guide to the design of future works on tactual perception and memory through a presentation of implications from previous studies.
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Dynamic cutaneous information is sufficient for precise curvature discrimination.

TL;DR: Curvature discrimination performance was best in the current study when dynamic cutaneous stimulation occurred in the absence of active movement, and for both age groups, the curvature discrimination thresholds obtained for passive touch were significantly lower than those that occurred during active touch.
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Journal Article

Object shape differences reflected by somatosensory cortical activation in human

TL;DR: The activation of the cortex lining the postcentral sulcus is regarded as crucial for the computation of curvature and in accordance with curvature being a major determinant of object form; this cortex is also crucially active in somatosensory shape perception.
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Intramanual and intermanual transfer of the curvature aftereffect

TL;DR: Results provide evidence that curvature information is not only represented at a level that is directly connected to the mechanoreceptors of individual fingers but is also represented in a stage in the somatosensory cortex shared by the fingers of both the hands.
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Investigation into the origin of the haptic aftereffect of curved surfaces

TL;DR: It is shown that the representation of curvature abstracted from the sense of touch, ie a high-level representation, is not affected during the aftereffect, and it is suggested that the physiological process involved in the afterenffect is a central process located in the brain but it is distinct for each hemisphere.
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Haptic Curvature Comparison of Convex and Concave Shapes

TL;DR: It is concluded that human observers had the ability to compare the curvature of shapes with an opposite direction, but that their performance decreased when they sensed the opponent surfaces with the same finger.
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Material properties determine how force and position signals combine in haptic shape perception.

TL;DR: Variations in the surface's material properties influence the sensorily available position and force signals, as well as the noise associated with these signals, which in the present case resulted from active exploration.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (2)
Q1. What contributions have the authors mentioned in the paper "Transfer of the curvature aftereffect in dynamic touch" ?

Van der Horst et al. this paper investigated the transfer of curvature aftereffect when curved surfaces were explored dynamically by a single finger. 

This finding raises interesting questions about the importance of self-induced movement in dynamic touch, which might be the subject of future studies.