1987
DOI: 10.1016/0168-5597(87)90031-1
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Selectivity of attenuation (i.e., gating) of somatosensory potentials during voluntary movement in humans

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Cited by 80 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…As in previous studies of either afferent or efferent gating (Abbruzzese et al 1980(Abbruzzese et al , 1981Burke et al 1982;Cohen and Starr 1987;Hsieh et al 1995;Insola et al 2004;Jones et al 1989;Klostermann et al 2002a;Tapia et al 1987), there were no changes in the latencies of any subcortical or cortical responses, nor in the amplitude of the braquial plexus response (N9), indicating that the gating effect is mediated only by central structures. In particular, an interaction between lemniscal and spinocerebellar inputs has been suggested to occur at a thalamic level Okajima et al 1991).…”
Section: Interactions Between Muscle and Cutaneous Afferent Volleyssupporting
confidence: 51%
“…As in previous studies of either afferent or efferent gating (Abbruzzese et al 1980(Abbruzzese et al , 1981Burke et al 1982;Cohen and Starr 1987;Hsieh et al 1995;Insola et al 2004;Jones et al 1989;Klostermann et al 2002a;Tapia et al 1987), there were no changes in the latencies of any subcortical or cortical responses, nor in the amplitude of the braquial plexus response (N9), indicating that the gating effect is mediated only by central structures. In particular, an interaction between lemniscal and spinocerebellar inputs has been suggested to occur at a thalamic level Okajima et al 1991).…”
Section: Interactions Between Muscle and Cutaneous Afferent Volleyssupporting
confidence: 51%
“…Gating accompanying both the preparation and the act of movement can be accompanied by an attenuation of sensory processes occurring both before and during the motor activity (Starr et al, 1969;Starr and Cohen, 1985). Gating in the auditory system has been shown to be due to both an attenuation of acoustic input accompanying movementrelated contractions of middle ear muscles (Cannel and Starr, 1963) and to changes in central auditory pathway processing (Starr, 1964;Tapia et al, 1987). We do not consider gating to be a mechanism accounting for the attenuation of any of the components defined in this study.…”
Section: Processes Acting To Modulate Evoked Potentialsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…SI activity is attenuated by other interfering somatosensory stimuli, but only very selectively when they occur anatomically near. 29 For instance, stimulation of the index finger produces SI activity that is attenuated with a second competitive stimulus occurring on the same hand but not the opposite one. 30 Interesting observations from the present data were the parallels between the early SEP components and the changes in perceptual thresholds.…”
Section: Staines Et Al Sensory Gating and Stroke Recovery 2649mentioning
confidence: 99%