| Literature DB >> 27486390 |
Anne E T Yang1, Mitra J Z Hartmann2.
Abstract
During active tactile exploration with their whiskers (vibrissae), rodents can rapidly orient to an object even though there are very few proprioceptors in the whisker muscles. Thus a long-standing question in the study of the vibrissal system is how the rat can localize an object in head-centered coordinates without muscle-based proprioception. We used a three-dimensional model of whisker bending to simulate whisking motions against a peg to investigate the possibility that the 3D mechanics of contact from a single whisker are sufficient for localization in head-centered coordinates. Results show that for nearly all whiskers in the array, purely tactile signals at the whisker base - as would be measured by mechanoreceptors, in whisker-centered coordinates - could be used to determine the location of a vertical peg in head-centered coordinates. Both the "roll" and the "elevation" components of whisking kinematics contribute to the uniqueness and resolution of the localization. These results offer an explanation for a behavioral study showing that rats can more accurately determine the horizontal angle of an object if one column, rather than one row, of whiskers is spared.Entities:
Keywords: biomechanics; orienting; superior colliculus; touch; trigeminal; whisker
Year: 2016 PMID: 27486390 PMCID: PMC4949211 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2016.00145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Equations used to simulate whisking kinematics.
| Row | Equation for protraction | Equation for elevation | Equation for roll |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | d𝜃 = 0.02°/timestep | φ = (56 ± 5.3) + 0.12d𝜃 | ζ = ζ0 – (0.76 ± 0.08)d𝜃 |
| B | d𝜃 = 0.02°/timestep | φ = (25 ± 9.4) + 0.30d𝜃 | ζ = ζ0 – (0.25 ± 0.18)d𝜃 |
| C | d𝜃 = 0.02°/timestep | φ = (-4.2 ± 6.3) + 0.30d𝜃 | ζ = ζ0 + (0.22 ± 0.22)d𝜃 |
| D | d𝜃 = 0.02°/timestep | φ = (-27.2 ± 7.7) + 0.14d𝜃 | ζ = ζ0 + (0.42 ± 0.11)d𝜃 |
| E | d𝜃 = 0.02°/timestep | φ = (-44 ± 7.6) + 0.02d𝜃 | ζ = ζ0 + (0.73 ± 0.14)d𝜃 |
| A | d𝜃 = 0.02°/timestep | φ = (53.3 ± 4.25) + (0.398 ± 0.005)d𝜃 | ζ = ζ0 – (0.900 ± 0.026)d𝜃 |
| B | d𝜃 = 0.02°/timestep | φ = (22.1 ± 4.69) + (0.591 ± 0.008)d𝜃 | ζ = ζ0 – (0.284 ± 0.005)d𝜃 |
| C | d𝜃 = 0.02°/timestep | φ = (-6.59 ± 5.30) + (0.578 ± 0.000)d𝜃 | ζ = ζ0 + (0.243 ± 0.000)d𝜃 |
| D | d𝜃 = 0.02°/timestep | φ = (-30.2 ± 5.21) + (0.393 ± 0.001)d𝜃 | ζ = ζ0 + (0.449 ± 0.001)d𝜃 |
| E | d𝜃 = 0.02°/timestep | φ = (-46.6 ± 4.64) + (0.217 ± 0.000)d𝜃 | ζ = ζ0 + (0.744 ± 0.001)d𝜃 |
Number of pegs reached and the percent of the (MB, MD) → (x, y) mapping that is unique.
| Whisker | N pegs | % unique |
|---|---|---|
| α | 535 | 100.00% |
| A1 | 446 | 100.00% |
| A2 | 305 | 99.99% |
| A3 | 166 | 100.00% |
| A4 | 66 | 100.00% |
| β | 1390 | 97.42% |
| B1 | 1023 | 98.88% |
| B2 | 668 | 99.93% |
| B3 | 397 | 100.00% |
| B4 | 194 | 100.00% |
| B5 | 55 | 100.00% |
| γ | 1656 | 99.53% |
| C1 | 1048 | 98.79% |
| C2 | 616 | 98.71% |
| C3 | 344 | 99.20% |
| C4 | 179 | 97.66% |
| C5 | 69 | 95.94% |
| C6 | 6 | N/A |
| δ | 1090 | 98.49% |
| D1 | 579 | 98.53% |
| D2 | 307 | 97.72% |
| D3 | 173 | 98.94% |
| D4 | 98 | 100.00% |
| D5 | 55 | 100.00% |
| D6 | 12 | 100.00% |
| E1 | 147 | 97.44% |
| E2 | 46 | 96.00% |
| E3 | 44 | 93.63% |
| E4 | 33 | 92.94% |
| E5 | 28 | 93.75% |
| E6 | 12 | 100.00% |
The effect of elevation and roll on the number of pegs reached and the (MB, MD) → (x, y) mapping uniqueness and resolution.
| Whisker C1 | Whisker D5 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N pegs | % unique | AMD | N pegs | % unique | AMD | |
| Realistic kinematics, including roll and elevation | 1048 | 98.79% | 1 | 55 | 100.00% | 1 |
| No elevation | 633 | 96.28% | 0.691 | 67 | 100.00% | 0.940 |
| No roll | 976 | 82.21% | 0.522 | 50 | 51.75% | 0.339 |