Tactile sensory channels over-ruled by frequency decoding system that utilizes spike pattern regardless of receptor type

Author:

Birznieks Ingvars123ORCID,McIntyre Sarah234,Nilsson Hanna Maria24,Nagi Saad S45ORCID,Macefield Vaughan G256,Mahns David A5,Vickery Richard M12

Affiliation:

1. School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, Australia

2. Neuroscience Research Australia, Sydney, Australia

3. Biomedical Engineering and Neuroscience, MARCS Institute, Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia

4. Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden

5. School of Medicine, Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia

6. The Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia

Abstract

The established view is that vibrotactile stimuli evoke two qualitatively distinctive cutaneous sensations, flutter (frequencies < 60 Hz) and vibratory hum (frequencies > 60 Hz), subserved by two distinct receptor types (Meissner’s and Pacinian corpuscle, respectively), which may engage different neural processing pathways or channels and fulfil quite different biological roles. In psychological and physiological literature, those two systems have been labelled as Pacinian and non-Pacinian channels. However, we present evidence that low-frequency spike trains in Pacinian afferents can readily induce a vibratory percept with the same low frequency attributes as sinusoidal stimuli of the same frequency, thus demonstrating a universal frequency decoding system. We achieved this using brief low-amplitude pulsatile mechanical stimuli to selectively activate Pacinian afferents. This indicates that spiking pattern, regardless of receptor type, determines vibrotactile frequency perception. This mechanism may underlie the constancy of vibrotactile frequency perception across different skin regions innervated by distinct afferent types.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Australian Research Council

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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