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Somatosensation01:33

Somatosensation

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The somatosensory system relays sensory information from the skin, mucous membranes, limbs, and joints. Somatosensation is more familiarly known as the sense of touch. A typical somatosensory pathway includes three types of long neurons: primary, secondary, and tertiary. Primary neurons have cell bodies located near the spinal cord in groups of neurons called dorsal root ganglia. The sensory neurons of ganglia innervate designated areas of skin called dermatomes.
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Major Somatic Sensory Pathways01:28

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Sensory impulses related to touch, pressure, vibration, and proprioception from various body parts, such as the limbs, trunk, neck, and posterior head, travel to the cerebral cortex through the posterior column-medial lemniscus pathway. The pathway’s name derives from the two white-matter tracts that convey the impulses: the spinal cord's posterior column and the brainstem's medial lemniscus. First-order sensory neurons extend their axons into the spinal cord, forming the...
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Sensory Perception: Organization of the Somatosensory System01:11

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The somatosensory system is the central and peripheral nervous system component that senses and processes touch, pressure, pain, temperature, and body position or proprioception. The process of sensation takes place at three levels:
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Howard Gardner's theory of Multiple Intelligence proposes that there are nine distinct types of intelligence, each reflecting different ways of interacting with the world. Introduced in 1983 and expanded in subsequent years, Gardner's framework challenges the traditional notion of a single, generalized intelligence.
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Social psychologists have documented that feeling good about ourselves and maintaining positive self-esteem is a powerful motivator of human behavior (Tavris & Aronson, 2008). In the United States, members of the predominant culture typically think very highly of themselves and view themselves as good people who are above average on many desirable traits (Ehrlinger, Gilovich, & Ross, 2005). Often, our behavior, attitudes, and beliefs are affected when we experience a threat to our...
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Confirmation Biases01:31

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The confirmation bias is the tendency to focus on information that confirms our existing beliefs and ignore information that is inconsistent with our expectations. For example, if you think that your professor is not very nice, you notice all of the instances of rude behavior exhibited by the professor while ignoring the countless pleasant interactions he is involved in on a daily basis. Have you ever fallen prey to the confirmation bias, either as the source or target of such bias?
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 23, 2025

Using the Race Model Inequality to Quantify Behavioral Multisensory Integration Effects
08:13

Using the Race Model Inequality to Quantify Behavioral Multisensory Integration Effects

Published on: May 10, 2019

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Automatic multisensory integration follows subjective confidence rather than objective performance.

Yi Gao1, Kai Xue2, Brian Odegaard3

  • 1School of Psychology, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, 30332, USA. yi.gao0525@outlook.com.

Communications Psychology
|March 12, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Sensory cues influence perception across senses. This study shows that subjective confidence, not objective accuracy, determines how strongly irrelevant visual cues affect auditory motion judgments, revealing common computational principles.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Perception Science
  • Multisensory Integration

Background:

  • Sensory information from one modality can automatically influence judgments in another.
  • The factors determining the strength of this cross-modal influence are not fully understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether the strength of multisensory impact depends on objective accuracy or subjective confidence of an irrelevant sensory cue.
  • To determine the role of confidence versus performance in cross-modal influence.

Main Methods:

  • Visual motion stimuli with varying motion energy (low vs. high) were created.
  • The impact of these visual stimuli on auditory motion perception was tested in 99 participants.
  • A computational model was used to analyze confidence reports and multisensory integration.

Main Results:

  • High-energy visual stimuli, associated with higher subjective confidence but lower objective accuracy, had a stronger influence on auditory motion judgments.
  • The results were consistent with confidence levels but contradicted objective accuracy.
  • The computational model successfully replicated these findings.

Conclusions:

  • Automatic multisensory integration is driven by subjective confidence rather than objective performance.
  • Common computational principles may underlie both confidence reporting and multisensory decision-making processes.