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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 2 August 2000, pp. 780-797
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
Pruett Jr., J. R.,
R. J. Sinclair, and
H. Burton.
Response Patterns in Second Somatosensory Cortex (SII) of Awake
Monkeys to Passively Applied Tactile Gratings. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 780-797, 2000. This experiment explored
the effects of controlled manipulations of three parameters of tactile
gratings, groove width (1.07-2.53 mm), contact force (30-90 g), and
scanning speed (40-120 mm/s), on the responses of cells in second
somatosensory cortex (SII) of awake monkeys that were performing a
groove-width classification task with passively presented stimuli. A
previous experiment involving an active touch paradigm demonstrated
that macaque SII cells code groove-width and hand-movement parameters
in their average firing rates. The present study used a passive-touch
protocol to remove somatosensory activation related to hand movements
that accompany haptic exploration of surfaces. Monkeys maintained a
constant hand position while a robotic device delivered stimulation
with tactile gratings to a single stabilized finger pad. Single-unit recordings isolated 216 neurons that were retrospectively assigned to
SII on histological criteria. Firing patterns for 86 of these SII cells
were characterized in detail, while monkeys classified gratings as
rough (1.90 and 2.53 mm groove widths) or smooth (1.07 and 1.42 mm
groove widths), with trial-wise random, parametric manipulation of
force or speed; the monkeys compared 1.07 versus 1.90 mm and 1.42 versus 2.53 mm in alternating blocks of trials. We studied 33 cells
with systematic variation of groove width and force, 49 with groove
width and speed, and four with all three variables. Sixty-three cells
were sensitive to groove width, 43 to force (effects of random force in
speed experiments contributed to N), and 34 to speed. Relatively equal
numbers of cells changed mean firing rates as positive or negative
functions of increasing groove width, force, and/or speed. Cells
typically changed mean firing rates for two or three of the independent
variables. Effects of groove width, force, and speed were additive or
interactive. The variety of response functions was similar to that
found in a prior study of primary somatosensory cortex (SI) that used
passive touch. The SII sample population showed correlated changes
(both positive and negative) in firing rates with increasing groove width and force and to a lesser degree, with increasing groove width
and speed. This correlation is consistent with human psychophysical studies that found increasing groove width and force increase perceived
roughness magnitude, and it strengthens the argument for SII's direct
involvement in roughness perception.
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