Abstract

A preliminary and two main experiments designed to examine the perceptual properties of electrocutaneous stimulation are reported. The stimuli used were single short pulses varying in intensity and duration. In Experiment 1, the exponents of power functions fitted to electrocutaneous magnitude estimation data were determined together with the sensory qualities induced by electrical stimulation. The results showed that there was no correlation between the exponent values and the sensory qualities. The mean exponent was 1.2. In Experiment 2, an intensity-duration trading function was constructed from the data obtained from identifying the induced sensory qualities. The results showed that the critical duration increases from 30 to 300 msec with increasing sensation level. These findings are compared with the properties of other sense modalities.

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