When two worlds collide: the influence of an obstacle in peripersonal space on multisensory encoding

Multisensory coding of the space surrounding our body, the peripersonal space, is crucial for motor control. Recently, it has been proposed that an important function of multisensory coding is that it allows anticipation of the tactile consequences of contact with a nearby object. Indeed, performing...

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Veröffentlicht in:Experimental brain research 2021-06, Vol.239 (6), p.1715-1726
Hauptverfasser: Menger, Rudmer, De Haan, Alyanne M., Van der Stigchel, Stefan, Dijkerman, H. Chris
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container_issue 6
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container_title Experimental brain research
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creator Menger, Rudmer
De Haan, Alyanne M.
Van der Stigchel, Stefan
Dijkerman, H. Chris
description Multisensory coding of the space surrounding our body, the peripersonal space, is crucial for motor control. Recently, it has been proposed that an important function of multisensory coding is that it allows anticipation of the tactile consequences of contact with a nearby object. Indeed, performing goal-directed actions (i.e. pointing and grasping) induces a continuous visuotactile remapping as a function of on-line sensorimotor requirements. Here, we investigated whether visuotactile remapping can be induced by obstacles, e.g. objects that are not the target of the grasping movement. In the current experiment, we used a cross-modal obstacle avoidance paradigm, in which participants reached past an obstacle to grasp a second object. Participants indicated the location of tactile targets delivered to the hand during the grasping movement, while a visual cue was sometimes presented simultaneously on the to-be-avoided object. The tactile and visual stimulation was triggered when the reaching hand passed a position that was drawn randomly from a continuous set of predetermined locations (between 0 and 200 mm depth at 5 mm intervals). We observed differences in visuotactile interaction during obstacle avoidance dependent on the location of the stimulation trigger: visual interference was enhanced for tactile stimulation that occurred when the hand was near the to-be-avoided object. We show that to-be-avoided obstacles, which are relevant for action but are not to-be-interacted with (as the terminus of an action), automatically evoke the tactile consequences of interaction. This shows that visuotactile remapping extends to obstacle avoidance and that this process is flexible.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00221-021-06072-1
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subjects Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biomedicine
Brain research
Cross-modal
Grasping
Hand
Human acts
Human behavior
Human mechanics
Motor task performance
Neurology
Neurosciences
Physiological aspects
Psychological aspects
Research Article
Sensorimotor integration
Sensorimotor system
Sensory integration
Tactile stimuli
Visual stimuli
title When two worlds collide: the influence of an obstacle in peripersonal space on multisensory encoding
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