Haptically evoked activation of visual cortex

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Abstract

Thanks to the acceleration of research into multisensory processing in recent years, the idea that the brain is organized around parallel processing of separate sensory inputs is giving way to the concept of a 'metamodal' brain [1] organized around particular tasks in a modality-independent fashion. For example, it is now apparent that many cortical areas previously thought to be specialized for processing specific aspects of visual input are also activated during analogous haptic or tactile tasks. In this chapter, we review the circumstances in which haptic or tactile tasks are associated with visual cortical activity and what this means for our internal representation of the external world, i.e., how information about objects and events in the external world is stored in memory. By 'haptic', we mean tasks involving active motor exploration of stimuli, whereas 'tactile' refers here to tasks in which stimuli are applied to the passive finger or other skin surface.

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Lacey, S., & Sathian, K. (2008). Haptically evoked activation of visual cortex. In Human Haptic Perception: Basics and Applications (pp. 251–257). Birkhauser Verlag AG. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-7643-7612-3_19

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