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A common computational principle for vibrotactile pitch perception in mouse and human

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  • Mario Prsa

    (University of Fribourg)

  • Deniz Kilicel

    (University of Geneva)

  • Ali Nourizonoz

    (University of Geneva)

  • Kuo-Sheng Lee

    (University of Geneva)

  • Daniel Huber

    (University of Geneva)

Abstract

We live surrounded by vibrations generated by moving objects. These oscillatory stimuli propagate through solid substrates, are sensed by mechanoreceptors in our body and give rise to perceptual attributes such as vibrotactile pitch (i.e. the perception of how high or low a vibration’s frequency is). Here, we establish a mechanistic relationship between vibrotactile pitch perception and the physical properties of vibrations using behavioral tasks, in which vibratory stimuli were delivered to the human fingertip or the mouse forelimb. The resulting perceptual reports were analyzed with a model demonstrating that physically different combinations of vibration frequencies and amplitudes can produce equal pitch perception. We found that the perceptually indistinguishable but physically different stimuli follow a common computational principle in mouse and human. It dictates that vibrotactile pitch perception is shifted with increases in amplitude toward the frequency of highest vibrotactile sensitivity. These findings suggest the existence of a fundamental relationship between the seemingly unrelated concepts of spectral sensitivity and pitch perception.

Suggested Citation

  • Mario Prsa & Deniz Kilicel & Ali Nourizonoz & Kuo-Sheng Lee & Daniel Huber, 2021. "A common computational principle for vibrotactile pitch perception in mouse and human," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 12(1), pages 1-8, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:12:y:2021:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-021-25476-9
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25476-9
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