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Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 4. KEYWORDS from Lecture 3. Psychophysics Fechner, Weber, Threshold, Method of limits, staircase, Method of constant stimuli, two alternative forced choice, method of adjustment
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Sensory Processes 3270 Lecture 4
KEYWORDS from Lecture 3 Psychophysics Fechner, Weber, Threshold, Method of limits, staircase, Method of constant stimuli, two alternative forced choice, method of adjustment Signal detection theory, threshold as probability, sensitivity versus response bias, criterion, outcome matrix, hit/miss/false alarm or false positives/correct rejection, receiver operating characteristic curves (ROC curves), sensitivity, d-prime (d') Just noticeable difference, Weber fraction/law/constant, Fechner's law, Stevens' power law, magnitude estimation, standard stimulus, response compression, response expansion
The difference threshold • just noticeable difference (jnd) • Weber’s law (1834) • the just noticeable increment is a constant fraction of the stimulus • Fechner’s law (1860) • sensation magnitude proportional to • logarithm (stimulus intensity) • assumption: all jnd’s are the same • stood for 100 years! • Weber Fractions • Taste 0.08 8% • Brightness 0.08 8% • Loudness 0.05 5% • Vibration 0.04 4% • Line length 0.03 3% • Heaviness 0.02 2% • Electric shock 0.01 1% • Steven’s law (1961) • (“To honour Fechner and repeal his law”) • sensation magnitude proportional to • (stimulus intensity) raised to a power
Increase in intensity Intensity = constant Ernst Weber (1795-1878)
Response compression Response expansion
Perceived magnitude Log (intensity) Gustav Fechner (1801-1887)
Perceived magnitude (intensity) h S.S. Stevens (1906-1973)
Consequences of Steven’s Law • response compression • response expansion • linear on a log scale
Somatosensory System section 3
somatosensory • Why? • Perception --- body parts (proprioception) • --- touch • --- special -- vibrissae • antennae • pain • braille • temperature • Protection • Temperature regulation • Limb arrangement and control • Head orientation (vestibular system)
somatosensory • How? • Receptors • Neural pathways • Neural codes • (remember those ‘common features’…)
Coding in the somatosensory system • detection • identify modality (Müller's doctrine of specific nerve energies 1826; labelled lines); • identify properties and spatial form • magnitude intensity (APs/sec; frequency coding; population coding; thresholds); • location (absolute, two-point discrimination, topographical coding) • movement
MEISSNER’S CORPUSCLE (RA) MERKEL’S DISK (SA) RUFFINI CORPUSCLE (SA) PACINI CORPUSCLE (very RA) GLABROUS (non-hairy) SKIN
MEISSNER’S CORPUSCLE (RA) MERKEL’S DISK (SA) Free nerve ending HAIRY SKIN RUFFINI ENDING (SA) PACINI CORPUSCLE (very RA) Nerve ending around hair (RA)
SA RA SA RA
fine detail hand grip control stretching vibration
SPATIAL EVENT PLOTS SA (Merkel) RA (Meissner) RA (Pacinian)
PACINIAN (vRA) MERKEL (SA)
4th 3rd Trigeminal system from face 2nd 1st SOMATOSENSORY CORTEX VENTRAL POSTERIOR LATERAL Nucleus of the thalamus CROSS OVER IN BRAIN STEM DORSAL COLUMNS Somatosensory pathway
After a limb has been amputated, “phantom” sensations can sometimes be created by stroking other areas of skin.
Demonstrates: 1 plasticity, 2 Müller’s law of specific nerve energies
Area of somatosensory cortex representing finger tip stimulate finger tip over many days Larger area now devoted to this finger tip DEMONSTRATES PLASTICITY
PRESSURE THRESHOLDS Don’t vary much
POINT LOCALIZATION THRESHOLDS
Afferent fibres SA RA PC Cortical cells in area 3b (SA)
Trigeminal system from face 1 2 3b 4 5 CROSS OVER 3a DORSAL COLUMNS Somatosensory pathways
Multiple representations 3a -- muscle spindles 3b -- SA (cutaneous) 1 ---- RA (cutaneous) 2 ---- joints 1 2 3b 4 5 3a
cutaneous mechanoreceptors Muscle spindles Joint receptors LIMB SENSING ORGANS Muscle spindles, cutaneous mechanoreceptors and joint receptors
Multiple representations 3a -- muscle spindles 3b -- SA (cutaneous) 1 ---- RA (cutaneous) 2 ---- joints 1 2 3b 4 5 3a
Secondary Somatosensory cortex Multiple representations 3a -- muscle spindles 3b -- SA (cutaneous) 1 ---- RA (cutaneous) 2 ---- joints Secondary Somatosensory cortex
Superior Colliculus
Superior Colliculus
Active vs passive touch active “object” passive “sensation” identifying cookies cutters active 95% correct passive 49% correct
could distinguish judged as same JUDGING TEXTURE
ADAPT none Slow freq High freq Meissner’s RA Pacinian vRA Meissner’s RA Pacinian vRA Meissner’s RA Pacinian vRA
POST-ADAPT chance DEMONSTRATES THAT VIBRATION NEEDED FOR TEXTURE
explore surface texture with tool demonstrates use of vibration
haptic perception Stereognosis: 3d object perception by haptic exploration