What are 2 things that are distinct about touch in comparison to the other senses?
What 2 receptors mediate temperature?
What are mechanoreceptors?
The receptors that respond to pressure/indentation of the skin
Where are mechanoreceptors located?
The smooth, hairless portions of the skin found on the palms/fingers/soles of the feet (glabrous skin)
What are the 4 main types of mechanoreceptors? MR PM
How many mechanoreceptors are found on the hairless skin on the hand?
17,000
What are temporal properties of afferent fibers?
Slowly adapting fibers respond continuously to a persistent stimulus and rapidly adapting fibers respond only to the onset and termination (i.e. a changing) of a stimulus.
What are spatial properties of afferent fibers?
Receptive fields in the skin have a concentric organisation (e.g. excitatory centre and inhibitory surround).
Some fibers have large receptive fields and others small receptive fields.
What shape is the vibration sensitivity of a Pacinian corpuscle? What is its sensitivity greatest at?
U-shaped. 250 Hz.
What are 4 properties of the Pacinian corpuscle?
How are absolute thresholds for passive touch measured? What were the findings?
By recording minimum force necessary to detect a fine nylon filament. Findings showed that 0.001mm can evoke a pressure sensation (Verillo, 1975).
Where is absolute sensitivity best?
The face.
Where is the two-point localisation threshold lowest?
Hands, feet and face.
What information about touch carried by?
Large, fast, myelinated afferent fibers
What is information about pain/temperature carried by?
The spinothalamic tract
Where in the brain is touch processed?
Somatosensory cortex
Areas with what function have larger amounts of neural tissue in the brain?
Areas that are important for the survival of the species.
(In humans: hands/lips/tongue)
What % of judgements were correct and how long did it take for participants to make them in Klatsy et al.’s (1985) study of blindfolded participants handling objects?
95%. 5s.
Information from the skin’s touch receptors is combined with information from _______ in the muscles and joints which encode the postures, locations and movements of the body.
Proprioceptors.
How many words per minute do experience Braille readers achieve? (Foulke & Berla, 1984)
100 or more.
Why is it easier to read text written in Braille rather than Roman letters?
Loomis (1981) showed that this is due to the limited ability of the skin to figure out fine spatial details (mechanical properties of skin cause ‘blurring’).
What can greatly influence the intensity/quality of pain?
Psychological factors (eg. attention/emotional state)
What is the evolutionary benefit of pain perception?
The adaptive avoidance of environmental situations that are harmful to the organism.
What is the evolutionary benefit of pain perception?
The adaptive avoidance of environmental situations that are harmful to the organism.