Andrew T. Baker
Kimberly-Clark
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Publication
Featured researches published by Andrew T. Baker.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Louise R. Manfredi; Andrew T. Baker; Damian O. Elias; John F. Dammann; Mark C. Zielinski; Vicky S. Polashock; Sliman J. Bensmaia
Because tactile perception relies on the response of large populations of receptors distributed across the skin, we seek to characterize how a mechanical deformation of the skin at one location affects the skin at another. To this end, we introduce a novel non-contact method to characterize the surface waves produced in the skin under a variety of stimulation conditions. Specifically, we deliver vibrations to the fingertip using a vibratory actuator and measure, using a laser Doppler vibrometer, the surface waves at different distances from the locus of stimulation. First, we show that a vibration applied to the fingertip travels at least the length of the finger and that the rate at which it decays is dependent on stimulus frequency. Furthermore, the resonant frequency of the skin matches the frequency at which a subpopulation of afferents, namely Pacinian afferents, is most sensitive. We show that this skin resonance can lead to a two-fold increase in the strength of the response of a simulated afferent population. Second, the rate at which vibrations propagate across the skin is dependent on the stimulus frequency and plateaus at 7 m/s. The resulting delay in neural activation across locations does not substantially blur the temporal patterning in simulated populations of afferents for frequencies less than 200 Hz, which has important implications about how vibratory frequency is encoded in the responses of somatosensory neurons. Third, we show that, despite the dependence of decay rate and propagation speed on frequency, the waveform of a complex vibration is well preserved as it travels across the skin. Our results suggest, then, that the propagation of surface waves promotes the encoding of spectrally complex vibrations as the entire neural population is exposed to essentially the same stimulus. We also discuss the implications of our results for biomechanical models of the skin.
Archive | 2003
Andrew T. Baker; Theresa Michelle McCoy; Stephen Avedis Baratian; Charles Wilson Colman
Archive | 2011
Russell F. Ross; Andrew T. Baker
Archive | 2008
Sridhar Ranganathan; Andrew T. Baker; Ralph Solarski; Joel Anderson; Jeanne Marie Gatto; Jeff Heller
Archive | 2005
Andrew T. Baker; Timothy James Blenke; Charles Wilson Colman; Edward A. Colombo; Jeffrey E. Fish; Kaiyuan Yang; Michael Joseph Garvey; Jeffrey J. Krueger; Mary Frances Mallory; Joseph E. Pierce; Fred R. Radwanski; Sridhar Ranganathan; Donald E. Waldroup
Archive | 2006
Andrew Mark Long; Davis Dang Hoang Nhan; Sridhar Ranganathan; Darold Dean Tippey; Andrew T. Baker; Thomas Michael Ales; Shawn Jeffery Sullivan
Archive | 2003
David A. Fell; Andrew T. Baker; Stephen Avedis Baratian
Archive | 2011
Kok-Ming Tai; Alison Salyer Bagwell; Andrew T. Baker; Emily A. Reichart; Phillip A. Schorr
Archive | 2012
Andrew T. Baker; Theresa Michelle McCoy; Stephen Avedis Baratian; Charles Wilson Colman
Archive | 2012
Andrew T. Baker; Theresa Michelle McCoy; Stephen Avedis Baratian; Charles Wilson Colman