Differential sensitivity to surface compliance by tactile afferents in the human finger pad

Author:

Condon Melia12,Birznieks Ingvars234,Hudson Kathryn12,Chelvanayagam David K.1,Mahns David14,Olausson Håkan5,Macefield Vaughan G.134

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine, University of Western Sydney, Sydney, Australia;

2. School of Science & Health, University of Western Sydney, Sydney, Australia;

3. Neuroscience Research Australia, Sydney, Australia;

4. MARCS Institute, University of Western Sydney, Sydney, Australia;

5. Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden

Abstract

We undertook a neurophysiological investigation of the responses of low-threshold mechanoreceptors in the human finger pad to surfaces of differing softness. Unitary recordings were made from 26 slowly adapting type I (SAI), 17 fast-adapting type I (FAI), and 9 slowly adapting type II (SAII) afferents via tungsten microelectrodes inserted into the median nerve at the wrist. A servo-controlled stimulator applied ramp-and-hold forces (1, 2, 4 N) at a constant loading and unloading rate (2 N/s) via a flat silicone disc over the center of the finger pad. Nine discs were used, which linearly increased in stiffness across the range. Population responses of the SAI afferents showed the greatest sensitivity to compliance, with a steep monotonic increase in mean firing rate with increasing stiffness (decreasing compliance) of the surface during the loading and plateau (but not unloading) phases. FAI afferents also showed a linear increase in firing during the loading but not unloading phase, although the slope was significantly lower than that of the SAI afferents at all amplitudes. Conversely, SAII afferents were influenced by object compliance only in certain conditions. Given their high density in the finger pads and their linear relationship between firing rate and object compliance during the loading and plateau phases, SAI afferents (together with FAI afferents during the loading phase) are ideally suited to contributing information on surface compliance to the overall estimation of softness, but the SAII afferents appear to play only a minor role.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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