Browse > Article
http://dx.doi.org/10.5143/JESK.2014.33.5.395

Neural Activation in the Somatosensory Cortex by Electrotactile Stimulation of the Fingers: A Human fMRI Study  

Seok, Ji-Woo (Department of Psychology, Chungnam National University)
Jang, Un-Jung (Department of Psychology, Chungnam National University)
Sohn, Jin-Hun (Department of Psychology, Chungnam National University)
Publication Information
Journal of the Ergonomics Society of Korea / v.33, no.5, 2014 , pp. 395-405 More about this Journal
Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study is to investigate 1) somatotopic arrangement of the second and third fingers in SI area 2) difference of neural activation in the SI area produced by stimulation with different frequencies 3) correlation between the intensity of tactile perception by different stimulus intensity and the level of brain activation measurable by means of fMRI. Background: Somatosensory cortex can obtain the information of environmental stimuli about "where" (e.g., on the left palm), "what" (e.g., a book or a dog), and "how" (e.g., scrub gently or scrub roughly) to organism. However, compared to visual sense, the neural mechanism underlying the processing of specific electrotactile stimulus is still unknown. Method: 10 right-handed subjects participated in this study. Non-painful electrotactile stimuli were delivered to two different finger tips of right hand. Functional brain images were collected from 3.0T MRI using the single-shot EPI method. The scanning parameters were as follows: TR and TE were 3000, 35ms, respectively, flip angle 60, FOV $24{\times}24cm$, matrix size $64{\times}64$, slice thickness 4mm (no gap). SPM5 was used to analyze the fMRI data. Results: Significant activations produced by the stimulation were found in the SI, SII, the subcentral gyrus, the precentral gyrus, and the insula. In all participants, statistically significant activation was observed in the contralateral SI area and the bilateral SII areas by the stimulation on the fingers but ipsilaterally dominant. The SI area representing the second finger generally located in the more lateral and inferior side than that of the third finger across all the subjects. But no difference in brain area was found for the stimulation of the fingers by different frequencies. And two typical patterns were observed on the relationship between the perceived psychological intensity and the amount of voxels in the primary sensory cortex during the stimulation. Conclusion: It was possible to discriminate the representation sites in the SI by electrotactile stimulation of digit2 and digit3. But we could not find the differences of the brain areas according to different stimulation frequencies from 3 to 300Hz. Application: The results of the study can provide a deeper understanding of somatosensory cortex and offer the information for tactile display for blinds.
Keywords
Electrotactile stimulation; Frequency; Functional magnetic resonance imaging; Somatosensory area;
Citations & Related Records
연도 인용수 순위
  • Reference
1 Boakye, M., Huckins, S.C., Szeverenyi, N.M., Taskey, B.I. and Hodge Jr, C.J., Functional magnetic resonance imaging of somatosensory cortex activity produced by electrical stimulation of the median nerve or tactile stimulation of the index finger, Journal of neurosurgery, 93(5), 774-783, 2000.   DOI
2 Burton, H., Videen, T. and Raichle, M., Tactile-vibration-activated foci in insular and parietal-opercular cortex studied with positron emission tomography: mapping the second somatosensory area in humans, Somatosensory & motor research, 10(3), 297-308, 1993.   DOI
3 Disbrow, E., Roberts, T., Poeppel, D. and Krubitzer, L., Evidence for interhemispheric processing of inputs from the hands in human S2 and PV, Journal of Neurophysiology, 85(5), 2236-2244, 2001.   DOI
4 Francis, S., Kelly, E., Bowtell, R., Dunseath, W., Folger, S. and McGlone, F., fMRI of the responses to vibratory stimulation of digit tips, Neuroimage, 11(3), 188-202, 2000.   DOI
5 Gelnar, P.A., Krauss, B.R., Szeverenyi, N.M. and Apkarian, A.V., Fingertip representation in the human somatosensory cortex: an fMRI study, Neuroimage, 7(4), 261-283, 1998.   DOI
6 Ogawa, S., Tank, D.W., Menon, R., Ellermann, J.M., Kim, S.G., Merkle, H. and Ugurbil, K., Intrinsic signal changes accompanying sensory stimulation: functional brain mapping with magnetic resonance imaging, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 89(13), 5951-5955, 1992.   DOI   ScienceOn
7 Harrington, G.S. and Downs III, H., FMRI mapping of the somatosensory cortex with vibratory stimuli: Is there a dependency on stimulus frequency?, Brain research, 897(1), 188-192, 2001.   DOI
8 Kurth, R., Villringer, K., Mackert, B.M., Schwiemann, J., Braun, J., Curio, G., Villringer, A. and Wolf, K.J., fMRI assessment of somatotopy in human Brodmann area 3b by electrical finger stimulation, Neuroreport, 9(2), 207-209, 1998.   DOI
9 Ledberg, A., O'Sullivan, B.T., Kinomura, S. and Roland, P.E., Somatosensory activations of the parietal operculum of man. A PET study, European Journal of Neuroscience, 7(9), 1934-1941, 1995.   DOI
10 Polonara, G., Fabri, M., Manzoni, T. and Salvolini, U., Localization of the first and second somatosensory areas in the human cerebral cortex with functional MR imaging, American Journal of Neuroradiology, 20(2), 199-205, 1999.
11 Reed, C.L., Shoham, S. and Halgren, E., Neural substrates of tactile object recognition: an fMRI study, Human brain mapping, 21(4), 236-246, 2004.   DOI   ScienceOn
12 Ruben, J., Schwiemann, J., Deuchert, M., Meyer, R., Krause, T., Curio, G., Villringer, K., Kurth, R. and Villringer, A., Somatotopic organization of human secondary somatosensory cortex, Cerebral Cortex, 11(5), 463-473, 2001.   DOI