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Journal article

Visual capture of apparent limb position influences tactile temporal order judgments.

Abstract:
Shore et al. [D.I. Shore, E. Spry, C. Spence, Spatial modulation of tactile temporal order judgments, Perception (submitted for publication)] recently demonstrated that people find it easier to judge which hand is touched first (in a tactile temporal order judgment task) when their hands are placed far apart rather than close together. In the present study, we used a mirror to manipulate the visually perceived distance between participants' hands, while holding the actual (i.e., proprioceptively-specified) distance between them constant. Participants were asked to determine which of two vibrotactile stimuli, one presented to either index finger using the method of constant stimuli, was presented first. Performance was significantly worse (i.e., the JND was larger) when the hands were perceived (due to the mirror reflection) as being close together rather than further apart. These results highlight the critical role that vision plays in influencing the conscious perception of the temporal order of tactile stimuli.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1016/j.neulet.2004.12.052

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Journal:
Neuroscience letters More from this journal
Volume:
379
Issue:
1
Pages:
63-68
Publication date:
2005-04-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1872-7972
ISSN:
0304-3940


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:26440
UUID:
uuid:f71ed228-2acd-4268-a6fe-df0bb00a195a
Local pid:
pubs:26440
Source identifiers:
26440
Deposit date:
2012-12-19
ARK identifier:

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