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Haptic adaptation to slant: No transfer between exploration modes

Dam, Loes C. J. van ; Plaisier, Myrthe A. ; Glowania, Catharina ; Ernst, Marc O. (2024)
Haptic adaptation to slant: No transfer between exploration modes.
In: Scientific Reports, 2016, 6 (1)
doi: 10.26083/tuprints-00027545
Article, Secondary publication, Publisher's Version

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Item Type: Article
Type of entry: Secondary publication
Title: Haptic adaptation to slant: No transfer between exploration modes
Language: English
Date: 23 July 2024
Place of Publication: Darmstadt
Year of primary publication: 4 October 2016
Place of primary publication: London
Publisher: Springer
Journal or Publication Title: Scientific Reports
Volume of the journal: 6
Issue Number: 1
Collation: 9 Seiten
DOI: 10.26083/tuprints-00027545
Corresponding Links:
Origin: Secondary publication service
Abstract:

Human touch is an inherently active sense: to estimate an object’s shape humans often move their hand across its surface. This way the object is sampled both in a serial (sampling different parts of the object across time) and parallel fashion (sampling using different parts of the hand simultaneously). Both the serial (moving a single finger) and parallel (static contact with the entire hand) exploration modes provide reliable and similar global shape information, suggesting the possibility that this information is shared early in the sensory cortex. In contrast, we here show the opposite. Using an adaptation-and-transfer paradigm, a change in haptic perception was induced by slant-adaptation using either the serial or parallel exploration mode. A unified shape-based coding would predict that this would equally affect perception using other exploration modes. However, we found that adaptation-induced perceptual changes did not transfer between exploration modes. Instead, serial and parallel exploration components adapted simultaneously, but to different kinaesthetic aspects of exploration behaviour rather than object-shape per se. These results indicate that a potential combination of information from different exploration modes can only occur at down-stream cortical processing stages, at which adaptation is no longer effective.

Identification Number: Artikel-ID: 34412
Status: Publisher's Version
URN: urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-275459
Classification DDC: 100 Philosophy and psychology > 150 Psychology
Date Deposited: 23 Jul 2024 13:55
Last Modified: 23 Jul 2024 13:55
URI: https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/id/eprint/27545
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