International audienceOur perception of skin wetness is generated readily, yet humans have no known receptor (hygroreceptor) to signal this directly. It is easy to imagine the sensation of water running over our hands or the feel of rain on our skin. The synthetic sensation of wetness is thought to be produced from a combination of specific skin thermal and tactile inputs, registered through thermoreceptors and mechanoreceptors, respectively. The present review explores how thermal and tactile afference from the periphery can generate the percept of wetness centrally. We propose that the main signals include information about skin cooling, signaled primarily by thinly myelinated thermoreceptors, and rapid changes in touch, through fast-cond...
Humans sense the wetness of a wet surface though the somatosensory integration of thermal and tactil...
The interaction between thermal and touch sensing seems to be largely acknowledged as the principal ...
Previous studies have indicated that the perception of wetness on the skin results from the integrat...
International audienceOur perception of skin wetness is generated readily, yet humans have no known ...
Evolutionarily, our ability to sense skin wetness and humidity (i.e., hygroreception) could have dev...
Although the ability to sense skin wetness and humidity is critical for behavioral and autonomic ada...
The ability to sense humidity and wetness is an important sensory attribute for many species across ...
Although the ability to sense skin wetness and humidity is critical for behavioral and autonomic ada...
The ability to perceive thermal changes in the surrounding environment is critical for survival. How...
International audienceThe study of the human ability to both detect the presence and estimate the am...
The central integration of thermal (i.e. cold) and mechanical (i.e. pressure) sensory afferents is s...
Undoubtedly, adjusting our thermoregulatory behavior represents the most effective mechanism to main...
International audienceHuman skin is innervated with a variety of receptors serving somatosensation a...
The ability to sense humidity and wetness is an important sensory attribute for many species across ...
Cold sensations are suggested as the primary inducer of the perception of skin wetness. However, lim...
Humans sense the wetness of a wet surface though the somatosensory integration of thermal and tactil...
The interaction between thermal and touch sensing seems to be largely acknowledged as the principal ...
Previous studies have indicated that the perception of wetness on the skin results from the integrat...
International audienceOur perception of skin wetness is generated readily, yet humans have no known ...
Evolutionarily, our ability to sense skin wetness and humidity (i.e., hygroreception) could have dev...
Although the ability to sense skin wetness and humidity is critical for behavioral and autonomic ada...
The ability to sense humidity and wetness is an important sensory attribute for many species across ...
Although the ability to sense skin wetness and humidity is critical for behavioral and autonomic ada...
The ability to perceive thermal changes in the surrounding environment is critical for survival. How...
International audienceThe study of the human ability to both detect the presence and estimate the am...
The central integration of thermal (i.e. cold) and mechanical (i.e. pressure) sensory afferents is s...
Undoubtedly, adjusting our thermoregulatory behavior represents the most effective mechanism to main...
International audienceHuman skin is innervated with a variety of receptors serving somatosensation a...
The ability to sense humidity and wetness is an important sensory attribute for many species across ...
Cold sensations are suggested as the primary inducer of the perception of skin wetness. However, lim...
Humans sense the wetness of a wet surface though the somatosensory integration of thermal and tactil...
The interaction between thermal and touch sensing seems to be largely acknowledged as the principal ...
Previous studies have indicated that the perception of wetness on the skin results from the integrat...