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J Neurophysiol (September 28, 2005). doi:10.1152/jn.00756.2005
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Submitted on July 18, 2005
Accepted on September 21, 2005

Psychophysical elements of place- and modality-specificity in the thalamic somatic sensory nucleus (ventral caudal - Vc) of awake humans

Salil Patel1, Shinji Ohara1, Patrick M. Dougherty1, Richard H. Gracely1, and Fred A. Lenz1*

1 Department of Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: flenz1{at}jhmi.edu.

Discrete anatomic structures in the monkey somatic sensory thalamus may segregate input arising from different peripheral receptors and from different parts of the body. It has been proposed that these structures serve as components of modality- and place-specific pathways from the periphery to the cortex. We now test this hypothesis by examining the modality- and place-specific segregation of sensations at sites where microstimulation (µA currents) within the region of Vc (ventral caudal - human principal somatic sensory nucleus) evokes somatic sensations. Microstimulation was delivered in an ascending staircase protocol consisting of different numbers of pulses (4-100) presented at different frequencies (10-200 Hz), during awake thalamic surgery for movement disorders. The results demonstrate that the part of the body where microstimulation evoked sensation (projected field) and the descriptors of non-painful sensations were usually uniform across the staircase. These results strongly support the existence of psychophysical elements of place- and modality-specificity in the Vc thalamus. The proportion of sites at which the sensation included more than one part of the body almost always stayed constant over current intervals (plateaus) of 10 µA. Similar plateaus were not found for sites with more than one descriptor, suggesting that elements of modality-specificity are smaller than and located within those for place-specificity. The intensity of sensations varied with the number of stimulation pulses for Mechanical/tingle and cool sensations. The results provide strong evidence for psychophysically-defined elements that are responsible for modality-specificity of non-painful sensations, place-specificity, and intensity coding of somatic sensation in the human thalamus.




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