We are able to identify and discriminate objects in the world because of exquisitely detailed and rapid processing of sensory information by neurons in the cortex of the brain. In this project we will examine these operations in neurons in the cortex that receive input from the large face whiskers of the rat. These whiskers are used for fine-grain discrimination and for gauging distance. They are deflected by being actively moved, under muscle control, over objects (active touch) or by being pas ....We are able to identify and discriminate objects in the world because of exquisitely detailed and rapid processing of sensory information by neurons in the cortex of the brain. In this project we will examine these operations in neurons in the cortex that receive input from the large face whiskers of the rat. These whiskers are used for fine-grain discrimination and for gauging distance. They are deflected by being actively moved, under muscle control, over objects (active touch) or by being passively deflected by objects. Deflection results in inputs to the brain that are processed to form the neural basis for very finely detailed perceptual behaviour. In rats, with impoverished visual and auditory senses, the whiskers are the major sensory system for interacting with the world, and are used in navigating the environment and in finding and distinguishing foods. Thus they contribute strongly to the remarkable success of this species. This elegant sensory system has a number of advantages that make it a very good model for the study of brain mechanisms responsible for active fine-grain sensory function. We plan to take advantage of the unique features of this system to define the information processing that occurs in the cortex in this elegantly complex system. This will address an issue relevant to all sensory systems - namely the neural basis of complex fine grain perceptual behaviour. Understanding the mechanisms underlying active tactile perception also has relevance to clinical conditions involving deficits in active touch e.g., in diabetic polyneuropathy (which eventually affects ~50% of diabetics), in leprosy (in which an early sign is damage to active touch). Knowledge of the core brain processes in active touch gained in this study could eventually underpin the ameliorative technologies for such deficits.Read moreRead less
Neural Mechanisms Underlying Human Grasp And Manipulation
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$396,100.00
Summary
We rely on hand function in a multitude of simple tasks that we tend to take for granted but that are essential in our everyday lives; some examples are turning on a tap, doing up shoelaces, or holding a cup. Many people in the community are disabled by impaired hand function resulting from lesions of the central nervous system or peripheral nerve lesions. The size of the problem is enormous; manual dexterity is affected in approximately 20,000 new stroke patients each year in Australia as well ....We rely on hand function in a multitude of simple tasks that we tend to take for granted but that are essential in our everyday lives; some examples are turning on a tap, doing up shoelaces, or holding a cup. Many people in the community are disabled by impaired hand function resulting from lesions of the central nervous system or peripheral nerve lesions. The size of the problem is enormous; manual dexterity is affected in approximately 20,000 new stroke patients each year in Australia as well as in other neurological diseases such as neuropathies, nerve injuries, cerebral palsy and many others. The broad aim of this study is to investigate the poorly understood neural mechanisms that underlie sensorimotor control of hand function. We will target a specific aspect of manual dexterity that is crucial for the execution of common everyday tasks, like pouring liquid from a bottle, in which the digits are subjected to torsional loads. In order to maintain stable grasps, the motor control system must rapidly and automatically adjust the grip forces employed to meet the demands imposed by the changing torsion. This is only possible because of sensory feedback from the hand, a large component of which arises from the cutaneous mechanoreceptive afferent fibres. In the first two years we will use a combined approach of neural recording from peripheral nerves in anaesthetised monkeys and psychophysics experiments in normal humans to answer the general question: how does the population of cutaneous afferents provide precise feedback about torsion on the digits? In the third year we will perform key experiments in humans, using microneurography to record from their peripheral nerves. This will establish any differences between human and monkey mechanoreceptors.Read moreRead less