Impact Prediction by Looming Visual Stimuli Enhances Tactile Detection

From an ecological point of view, approaching objects are potentially more harmful than receding objects. A predator, a dominant conspecific, or a mere branch coming up at high speed can all be dangerous if one does not detect them and produce the appropriate escape behavior fast enough. And indeed,...

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Published inThe Journal of neuroscience Vol. 35; no. 10; pp. 4179 - 4189
Main Authors Cléry, Justine, Guipponi, Olivier, Odouard, Soline, Wardak, Claire, Ben Hamed, Suliann
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Society for Neuroscience 11.03.2015
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ISSN0270-6474
1529-2401
DOI10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3031-14.2015

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Summary:From an ecological point of view, approaching objects are potentially more harmful than receding objects. A predator, a dominant conspecific, or a mere branch coming up at high speed can all be dangerous if one does not detect them and produce the appropriate escape behavior fast enough. And indeed, looming stimuli trigger stereotyped defensive responses in both monkeys and human infants. However, while the heteromodal somatosensory consequences of visual looming stimuli can be fully predicted by their spatiotemporal dynamics, few studies if any have explored whether visual stimuli looming toward the face predictively enhance heteromodal tactile sensitivity around the expected time of impact and at its expected location on the body. In the present study, we report that, in addition to triggering a defensive motor repertoire, looming stimuli toward the face provide the nervous system with predictive cues that enhance tactile sensitivity on the face. Specifically, we describe an enhancement of tactile processes at the expected time and location of impact of the stimulus on the face. We additionally show that a looming stimulus that brushes past the face also enhances tactile sensitivity on the nearby cheek, suggesting that the space close to the face is incorporated into the subjects' body schema. We propose that this cross-modal predictive facilitation involves multisensory convergence areas subserving the representation of a peripersonal space and a safety boundary of self.
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J.C. and O.G. contributed equally to this work.
Author contributions: C.W. and S.B.H. designed research; J.C., O.G., and S.O. performed research; S.B.H. contributed unpublished reagents/analytic tools; J.C. and O.G. analyzed data; J.C., O.G., C.W., and S.B.H. wrote the paper.
ISSN:0270-6474
1529-2401
DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3031-14.2015