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Temporal changes in cutaneous sensitivity during prolonged visual deprivation.
Authors:Milstein, S. L.   Zubek, John P.
Abstract:Conducted 2 experiments with a total of 62 male undergraduates and 60 controls in which various measures of cutaneous sensitivity were administered at intervals of 0, 1/2, 1, 2, 3, 5, and 7 days of visual deprivation (darkness). Relative to controls results reveal no significant differences in performance on the 2-point threshold and on measures of pressure and pain sensitivity, although on the last 2 measures a definite trend toward an improvement was observed after the 3rd day. However, results on the tactual fusion threshold reveal a linear improvement in performance as a function of increasing duration of visual deprivation, a facilitatory effect which was already present, to a statistically significant degree, at the 1st test period of 12 hr. Results of a 3rd experiment, also with 32 experimental ss and 30 controls, indicate that this improvement on the tactual fusion task 1st appeared somewhere between 4 and 12 hr. Of deprivation. Various hypotheses are offered to account for these differential results and findings are related to D. P. Schultz's sensoristatic theory. (french summary) (17 ref.) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
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