The neural correlates of texture perception: A systematic review and activation likelihood estimation meta‐analysis of functional magnetic resonance imaging studies

Author:

Henderson Jessica1ORCID,Mari Tyler1,Hewitt Danielle1,Newton‐Fenner Alice12ORCID,Giesbrecht Timo3,Marshall Alan4,Stancak Andrej12,Fallon Nicholas1

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

2. Institute of Risk and Uncertainty University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

3. Unilever, Research and Development Port Sunlight UK

4. Department of Electrical Engineering and Electronics University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionHumans use discriminative touch to perceive texture through dynamic interactions with surfaces, activating low‐threshold mechanoreceptors in the skin. It was largely assumed that texture was processed in primary somatosensory regions in the brain; however, imaging studies indicate heterogeneous patterns of brain activity associated with texture processing.MethodsTo address this, we conducted a coordinate‐based activation likelihood estimation meta‐analysis of 13 functional magnetic resonance imaging studies (comprising 15 experiments contributing 228 participants and 275 foci) selected by a systematic review.ResultsConcordant activations for texture perception occurred in the left primary somatosensory and motor regions, with bilateral activations in the secondary somatosensory, posterior insula, and premotor and supplementary motor cortices. We also evaluated differences between studies that compared touch processing to non‐haptic control (e.g., rest or visual control) or those that used haptic control (e.g., shape or orientation perception) to specifically investigate texture encoding. Studies employing a haptic control revealed concordance for texture processing only in the left secondary somatosensory cortex. Contrast analyses demonstrated greater concordance of activations in the left primary somatosensory regions and inferior parietal cortex for studies with a non‐haptic control, compared to experiments accounting for other haptic aspects.ConclusionThese findings suggest that texture processing may recruit higher order integrative structures, and the secondary somatosensory cortex may play a key role in encoding textural properties. The present study provides unique insight into the neural correlates of texture‐related processing by assessing the influence of non‐textural haptic elements and identifies opportunities for a future research design to understand the neural processing of texture.

Funder

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Unilever

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience

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