Abstract

Multisensory interactions between pain and vision allow us to adapt our behavior to optimize detection and reaction against bodily threats. Interactions between different sensory inputs are enhanced when they are perceived closely in space and time. However, thermo-nociceptive and visual stimuli are conveyed to the cortex through specific pathways with their own conduction velocity. The present experiment aims to measure the necessary asynchrony between a nociceptive stimulus and a visual stimulus for both to be perceived as occurring simultaneously. Healthy volunteers performed a temporal order judgment task during which they discriminated the temporal order between a laser-induced nociceptive stimulus applied on one hand dorsum and a visual stimulus presented next to the stimulated hand. Laser stimulus temperature selectively activated Aδ- and/or C- fiber afferents. In order to be perceived as occurring simultaneously with a visual stimulus, a thermo-nociceptive input selectively conveyed by C-fiber afferents must precede the visual stimulus by 577 ms on average, while the stimulus-evoked input conveyed by Aδ-fiber afferents must precede it by 76 ms on average. This experiment focuses on the necessary asynchrony between thermo-nociceptive and visual inputs for them to be perceived simultaneously, to optimize the conditions under which they interact closely. Since C-fibers are unmyelinated, the asynchrony between a C-fiber stimulus and a visual stimulus is much greater than the asynchrony between a nociceptive stimulus additionally activating Aδ-fibers and that same visual stimulus. It is crucial to consider these discrepancies in further studies interested in multisensory interactions.

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