Oscillatory Responses to Tactile Stimuli of Different Intensity.

Journal: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
PMID:

Abstract

Tactile perception encompasses several submodalities that are realized with distinct sensory subsystems. The processing of those submodalities and their interactions remains understudied. We developed a paradigm consisting of three types of touch tuned in terms of their force and velocity for different submodalities: discriminative touch (haptics), affective touch (C-tactile touch), and knismesis (alerting tickle). Touch was delivered with a high-precision robotic rotary touch stimulation device. A total of 39 healthy individuals participated in the study. EEG cluster analysis revealed a decrease in alpha and beta range (mu-rhythm) as well as theta and delta increase most pronounced to the most salient and fastest type of stimulation. The participants confirmed that slower stimuli targeted to affective touch low-threshold receptors were the most pleasant ones, and less intense stimuli aimed at knismesis were indeed the most ticklish ones, but those sensations did not form an EEG cluster, probably implying their processing involves deeper brain structures that are less accessible with EEG.

Authors

  • Alexander Kuc
    Tactile Communication Research Laboratory, Pushkin State Russian Language Institute, 117485 Moscow, Russia.
  • Ivan Skorokhodov
    Tactile Communication Research Laboratory, Pushkin State Russian Language Institute, 117485 Moscow, Russia.
  • Alexey Semirechenko
    Tactile Communication Research Laboratory, Pushkin State Russian Language Institute, 117485 Moscow, Russia.
  • Guzal Khayrullina
    Tactile Communication Research Laboratory, Pushkin State Russian Language Institute, 117485 Moscow, Russia.
  • Vladimir Maksimenko
    Neuroscience and Cognitive Technology Laboratory, Center for Technologies in Robotics and Mechatronics Components, Innopolis University, 420500 Innopolis, The Republic of Tatarstan, Russia.
  • Anton Varlamov
    Autonomous Non-Profit Organization "Our Sunny World", 109052 Moscow, Russia.
  • Susanna Gordleeva
    Tactile Communication Research Laboratory, Pushkin State Russian Language Institute, 117485 Moscow, Russia.
  • Alexander Hramov
    Neuroscience and Cognitive Technology Laboratory, Center for Technologies in Robotics and Mechatronics Components, Innopolis University, 420500 Innopolis, Russia.