Abstract

Our previous human fMRI study found brain activations correlated with tactile stickiness perception using the uni-variate general linear model (GLM) (Yeon et al., 2017). Here, we conducted an in-depth investigation on neural correlates of sticky sensations by employing a multivoxel pattern analysis (MVPA) on the same dataset. In particular, we statistically compared multi-variate neural activities in response to the three groups of sticky stimuli: A supra-threshold group including a set of sticky stimuli that evoked vivid sticky perception; an infra-threshold group including another set of sticky stimuli that barely evoked sticky perception; and a sham group including acrylic stimuli with no physically sticky property. Searchlight MVPAs were performed to search for local activity patterns carrying neural information of stickiness perception. Similar to the uni-variate GLM results, significant multi-variate neural activity patterns were identified in postcentral gyrus, subcortical (basal ganglia and thalamus), and insula areas (insula and adjacent areas). Moreover, MVPAs revealed that activity patterns in posterior parietal cortex discriminated the perceptual intensities of stickiness, which was not present in the uni-variate analysis. Next, we applied a principal component analysis (PCA) to the voxel response patterns within identified clusters so as to find low-dimensional neural representations of stickiness intensities. Follow-up clustering analyses clearly showed separate neural grouping configurations between the Supra- and Infra-threshold groups. Interestingly, this neural categorization was in line with the perceptual grouping pattern obtained from the psychophysical data. Our findings thus suggest that different stickiness intensities would elicit distinct neural activity patterns in the human brain and may provide a neural basis for the perception and categorization of tactile stickiness.

Highlights

  • The perception of surface texture is of great importance to interact with the environment in our daily life

  • Dimensionality Reduction Analysis Once we found significant clusters that carry information of stickiness perception, we attempted to visualize a spatial distribution of neural activity patterns evoked by 7 levels of stickiness intensity (6 stickiness levels and sham stimulus)

  • Our result indicates that postcentral gyrus and thalamus may take part in sticky stimulus recognition as well as perception

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Summary

Introduction

The perception of surface texture is of great importance to interact with the environment in our daily life. The slowly adapting type 1 (SA1) afferents mediate a spatial mechanism, and rapidly adapting (RA) and Pacinian (PC) afferents mediate a temporal mechanism of surface texture perception These texture-related afferent signals lead to the neural responses in the primary somatosensory cortex (S1). In a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study by Reed et al (2004), participants explored various tactile objects along multiple dimensions (e.g., hardness, roughness) and conducted a tactile object recognition task during the brain image acquisition. Their results demonstrated a primary role of somatosensory association areas in the tactile stimulus recognition. Compared with other dimensions, relatively less attention has been devoted to the sticky sensation in spite of its significance for surface texture perception (Bensmaia, 2016)

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