Touch can be as accurate as passively-guided kinaesthesis in length perception

Journal article


Van Doorn, George H., Richardson, Barry L. and Symmons, Mark A.. (2013). Touch can be as accurate as passively-guided kinaesthesis in length perception. Multisensory Research. 26(5), pp. 417 - 428. https://doi.org/10.1163/22134808-00002428
AuthorsVan Doorn, George H., Richardson, Barry L. and Symmons, Mark A.
Abstract

Two experiments were designed to investigate the contribution of touch and kinaesthesis to haptic perception of the length of raised lines. Experiment 1 showed that judgements based on kinaesthetic information were not more accurate than those based on cutaneous information. Instead, kinaesthetic and cutaneous inputs appear to be weighted almost equally in the haptic percept, with haptic performance more closely approximated by cutaneous performance than by kinaesthetic. In Experiment 2 it was shown that effects attributed to condition (modality) were not due to the speed with which the stimulus or exploring finger moved. Our results challenge the view that kinaesthesis is more important than touch for identification of raised line drawings.

Keywordscutaneous; passively-guided kinaesthesis; raised line; perception
Year2013
JournalMultisensory Research
Journal citation26 (5), pp. 417 - 428
PublisherBrill
ISSN2213-4794
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1163/22134808-00002428
Scopus EID2-s2.0-84893222272
Page range417 - 428
Research GroupMary MacKillop Institute for Health Research
Publisher's version
File Access Level
Controlled
Place of publicationNetherlands
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https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/86qwz/touch-can-be-as-accurate-as-passively-guided-kinaesthesis-in-length-perception

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