Coding source localization through inter-spike delay: modelling a cluster of Pacinian Corpuscles using time-division multiplexing approach

Somatosens Mot Res. 2020 Jun;37(2):63-73. doi: 10.1080/08990220.2020.1726739. Epub 2020 Feb 17.

Abstract

The Pacinian Corpuscle (PC) is the most sensitive mechanoreceptor in the human body found in clusters of two or three. We extended our previous model of an isolated-PC to a cluster-PC focussing on relative spike delay and displacement threshold for understanding how the stimulus location is coded. In our model, two PCs with Gaussian overlapping receptive fields are arranged beneath the skin model. For a spatiotemporal stimulus (vibration), the model response is proposed to be a time-division multiplexing of responses from two PCs within the cluster. While the spike rate characteristics and pole-zero plot of cluster-PC model show similarities with the isolated-PC model, the frequency response shows ripples after 1 kHz as the distance (d) between the PCs increases. The stimulus location [Formula: see text] and d influence the relative spike delay and the displacement threshold, but not the spike rate. The novel contributions from our model include prediction of (i) relative spike delay for various d, stimulus frequency (f), and ψ, (ii) spike rate characteristics for varying f, and (iii) displacement threshold curve as a function of frequency for various d. Although the physiological validation of the novel predictions is impractical, we have validated the relative spike delay and the displacement threshold curves with experimental data in the literature.

Keywords: Receptive field; displacement threshold; relative spike delay; spatiotemporal stimulus; spike rate; time-division multiplexing.

MeSH terms

  • Action Potentials / physiology*
  • Humans
  • Models, Biological*
  • Pacinian Corpuscles / physiology*
  • Physical Stimulation
  • Spatio-Temporal Analysis
  • Vibration