| Literature DB >> 21423359 |
Abstract
Le Chatelier's principle asserts that a disturbance, when applied to a resting system may drive the system away from its equilibrium state, but will invoke a countervailing influence that will counteract the effect of the disturbance. When applied to the field of sensation and perception, a generalized stimulus will displace the system from equilibrium, and a generalized adaptation process will serve as the countervailing influence tending to reduce the impact of the stimulus. The principle applies at all levels, from the behavioral to the neural, the larger enfolding the smaller in fractal-like form. Le Chatelier's principle, so applied, leads to the unification of many concepts in sensory science. Ideas as diverse as sensory adaptation, reflex arcs, and simple deductive logic can be brought under the umbrella of a single orienting principle. Beyond unification, this principle allows us to approach many questions in pathophysiology from a different perspective. For example, we find new direction toward the reduction of phantom-limb pain and possibly of vertigo.Entities:
Keywords: concept of pain; fractals; perceptual systems; sensory adaptation
Year: 2010 PMID: 21423359 PMCID: PMC3059932 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2010.00017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1Classical Le Chatelier–Braun schema.
Figure 2Le Chatelier–Braun principle extended to sensory function.
Figure 3Evolution of Figure .
Figure 4Change of uncertainty, . H(0) = 0. In response to a steady stimulus applied at t = 0, H rises rapidly, then adapts to a value of about 3 as uncertainty declines, but does not vanish. A second stimulus greater in magnitude than the first, is applied at t = 50. Uncertainty rises again, and then adapts to a value of about 8.