REVIEW NEUROREPORT Why can't you tickle yourself? Sarah-Jayne Blakemore,CA Daniel Wolpert and Chris Frith Wellcome Department of Cognitive Neurology, Institute of Neurology, University College London, 12 Queen Square, London WC1N 3BG, UK CACorresponding Author It is well known that you cannot tickle yourself. Here, we an increase in tickliness. Functional neuroimaging studies have discuss the proposal that such attenuation of self-produced demonstrated that this sensory attenuation might be mediated tactile stimulation is due to the sensory predictions made by an by somatosensory cortex and anterior cingulate cortex: these internal forward model of the motor system. A forward model areas are activated less by a self-produced tactile stimulus than predicts the sensory consequences of a movement based on by the same stimulus when it is externally produced. Further- the motor command. When a movement is self-produced, its more, evidence suggests that the cerebellum might be involved sensory consequences can be accurately predicted, and this in generating the prediction of the sensory consequences of prediction can be used to attenuate the sensory effects of the movement. Finally, recent evidence suggests that this predictive movement. Studies are reviewed that demonstrate that as the mechanism is abnormal in patients with auditory hallucinations discrepancy between predicted and actual sensory feedback and/or passivity experiences. NeuroReport 11:11±16 & 2000 increases during self-produced tactile stimulation there is a Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. concomitant decrease in the level of sensory attenuation and Key words: fMRI; Forward models; Schizophrenia; Tickling INTRODUCTION with the ®nger), the retinal location of objects changes, but Detecting the consequences of our own actions: We can the predicted eye position is not updated, leading to the readily distinguish between sensations that are produced perception that the world is moving. Prediction can also by our own movements and sensations that are caused by work in other sensory modalities to ®lter sensory informa- a change in the environment. This ability is important tion, attenuating the component that is due to self-move- because it enables us to pick out stimuli that correspond to ment (re-afference) from that due to changes in the outside potentially biologically signi®cant external events from world, and it is this use of prediction that forms the focus stimuli that arise simply as a consequence of our own of this review. In order to generate sensory predictions, it motor actions. It has been proposed that information about is postulated that the central nervous system contains a motor commands is used to distinguish the sensory con- central monitor [6] or internal `forward model' [3,10,11]. sequences of our own actions from externally produced Forward models mimic aspects of the external world sensory stimuli [1±5], giving us the ability to monitor and and the motor system in order to capture the forward or recognise as our own, self-generated limb movements, causal relationship between actions and their outcomes touch, speech and thoughts [6]. This kind of mechanism [2,10,12] (Fig. 1). An efference copy of the motor command can be used to maintain perceptual stability in the presence [8] is used to generate continuously predictions of the of self-produced movement. For example, during eye- sensory consequences (or corollary discharge [9]) of the movements an efference copy of the motor command is ongoing motor act. This prediction is then compared with used to predict the effects of the movement [7±9]. In order the actual sensory feedback (re-afference) from the move- to determine the location of an object relative to the head, ment. Self-produced sensations can be correctly predicted its retinal location and the gaze direction must be known. on the basis of motor commands, and there will therefore As the eye muscles are thought to contain no sensory be little or no sensory discrepancy resulting from the receptors used to determine the gaze direction, Helmholtz comparison between the predicted and actual sensory [7] proposed that the gaze direction is determined by feedback. This accurate prediction can be used to attenuate predicting the eye location based on the efference copy of the sensory effects of self-produced movement. In contrast, the motor command going to the eye muscles. Using this externally generated sensations are not associated with any estimate of eye position together with the object's retinal efference copy and therefore cannot be predicted by the location, the object's true position in space can be deter- forward model. By removing or attenuating the component mined. When the eye is moved without using the eye of sensory feedback that is due to self-produced movement muscles (for example by gently pressing on the eye lid it is possible to accentuate the feedback that is caused by 0959-4965 & Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Vol 11 No 11 3 August 2000 R11 NEUROREPORT S.J. BLAKEMORE, D. WOLPERT AND C. FRITH Predicted sensory feedback The perception of the sensory consequences of actions: (Corollary discharge) Evidence suggests that the sensory consequences of some Predictor self-generated movements are perceived differently from Efference an identical sensory input that is externally generated. An copy Sensory example of such differential perception is the phenomenon discrepancy ("tickliness") that people cannot tickle themselves [21,22]. In Weiskrantz et al.'s psychophysical study, a tactile stimulus that trans- Sensorimotor versed the sole of the subject's foot was administered either Motor command system Actual sensory feedback by the experimenter or the by the subject. Subjects rated the self-administered tactile stimulus as less tickly than the External influences externally administered tactile stimulus. When the experi- (e.g. delay) menter moved the subject's hand to tickle their foot, the tickle strength was reduced, but not to the level of the self- Fig. 1. A model for determining the sensory consequences of a move- administered tactile stimulus. The differences in response ment. An internal forward model makes predictions of the sensory were attributed to the mode of delivery: self-administered feedback based on the motor command. These predictions are then tactile stimulation produces both efference copy, in accor- compared with the actual sensory feedback. Self-produced sensations can be correctly predicted on the basis of the motor command and are dance with the motor command, and re-afference pro- associated with little or no sensory discrepancy resulting from the duced by the arm movement; passive arm movement comparison between predicted and actual sensory feedback. As the produces only re-afference, and externally administered sensory discrepancy from this comparison increases (for example by tactile stimulation produces neither efference copy nor re- increasing the delay or trajectory rotation between the movement and afference. The authors therefore concluded that although its sensory consequences) so does the likelihood that the sensation is re-afference plays a role, the signal used for attenuation is externally produced. By using such a system it is possible to cancel out the effects on sensation induced by self-motion and thereby distinguish based mainly on the efference copy signal produced in sensory events due to self-produced motion from the sensory feedback concordance with a self-generated movement. caused by the environment, such as contact with objects. One explanation of these results is that there is a general gating of all incoming sensory stimulation during self- generated movement. Indeed, this kind of sensory gating during movement has been documented in humans [23± external effects. This process therefore ®lters incoming 26]. For example, detection thresholds for an electrically sensory information for perhaps the more relevant com- induced twitch of the arm muscle are attenuated by ponent of information. voluntary movements of the stimulated arm [25]. Such ®ndings suggest that the perception of sensory stimulation Forward models in schizophrenia: Frith [6] proposed that might be attenuated simply if self-generated movement a defect in this kind of central 'self-monitoring' mechanism occurs simultaneously with the stimulus: the movement might underlie auditory hallucinations and passivity phe- might not necessarily have to produce the sensory stimulus nomena, which are '®rst rank' features in schizophrenia in order for it to be attenuated. This, however, is incon- [13]. Auditory hallucinations normally consist of hearing sistent with the theoretical approach of forward models we spoken voices [14,15]. The essence of passivity experiences have outlined, which posits that in order for sensory (or delusions of control) is that the subject experiences his attenuation to occur, the speci®c sensory consequences of or her will as replaced by that of some other force or the movement must be predicted accurately. According to agency [16]: 'My ®ngers pick up the pen, but I don't our hypothesis, the sensory stimulation would have to control them. What they do is nothing to do with me... The correspond to the movement producing it in order for force moved my lips. I began to speak. The words were perceptual attenuation to occur. If this hypothesis is true, made for me' [17]. there are two further possibilities. First, the sensory stimu- Frith has suggested that these abnormal experiences lation might have to correspond
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