Background: A growing body of evidence suggests the existence of a Tactile Mirror System in the human brain: the observation of tactile events activates the same cortical network implicated in tactile perception, including the primary somatosensory cortex (S1). It has been suggested that such crossmodal, mirror-like, responses of S1 may arise from Hebbian association learning plasticity: the contingency of seeing a touch and the feeling of a tactile sensation may reinforce synapses between visual and somatosensory neurons. We tested this hypothesis with a novel crossmodal Paired Associative Stimulation (PAS). Methods: In the crossmodal PAS, a visual stimulus depicting a hand being touched is repeatedly presented, paired with a Transcranical Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) pulse over S1. We investigated the efficacy of this protocol in inducing timing-dependent crossmodal plasticity, assessed in terms of changes of tactile acuity. Eighteen healthy participants took part in a within-subjects experiment: the inter-stimulus interval (ISI) between the seen touch and the TMS pulse varied across PAS sessions. Results: A significant improvement in tactile acuity was induced by the cross-modal PAS only at a selective (20 ms) ISI. The present result shows that associative plasticity within S1 can be effectively induced through vision, highlighting the existence of crossmodal plastic mechanisms.

Zazio, A., Maddaluno, O., Guidali, G., Miniussi, C., Bolognini, N. (2018). Cross-modal properties of the primary somatosensory cortex: a by-product of Hebbian association learning.. In Atti del congresso "Cognitive Science Arena 2018".

Cross-modal properties of the primary somatosensory cortex: a by-product of Hebbian association learning.

Zazio, A;Maddaluno, O;Guidali, G;Bolognini, N
2018

Abstract

Background: A growing body of evidence suggests the existence of a Tactile Mirror System in the human brain: the observation of tactile events activates the same cortical network implicated in tactile perception, including the primary somatosensory cortex (S1). It has been suggested that such crossmodal, mirror-like, responses of S1 may arise from Hebbian association learning plasticity: the contingency of seeing a touch and the feeling of a tactile sensation may reinforce synapses between visual and somatosensory neurons. We tested this hypothesis with a novel crossmodal Paired Associative Stimulation (PAS). Methods: In the crossmodal PAS, a visual stimulus depicting a hand being touched is repeatedly presented, paired with a Transcranical Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) pulse over S1. We investigated the efficacy of this protocol in inducing timing-dependent crossmodal plasticity, assessed in terms of changes of tactile acuity. Eighteen healthy participants took part in a within-subjects experiment: the inter-stimulus interval (ISI) between the seen touch and the TMS pulse varied across PAS sessions. Results: A significant improvement in tactile acuity was induced by the cross-modal PAS only at a selective (20 ms) ISI. The present result shows that associative plasticity within S1 can be effectively induced through vision, highlighting the existence of crossmodal plastic mechanisms.
abstract + slide
somatosensory cortex; hebbian learning; paired associative stimulation; TMS
English
Cognitive Science Arena
Atti del congresso "Cognitive Science Arena 2018"
2018
none
Zazio, A., Maddaluno, O., Guidali, G., Miniussi, C., Bolognini, N. (2018). Cross-modal properties of the primary somatosensory cortex: a by-product of Hebbian association learning.. In Atti del congresso "Cognitive Science Arena 2018".
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/189971
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