QUANTITATIVE ASPECTS OF CUTANEOUS SENSORY ADAPTATION. I
Open Access
- 19 July 1933
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 16 (6) , 911-923
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.16.6.911
Abstract
1. Adaptation of tactile receptors in the skin of the frog to excitation by an intermittent jet of air is measured and correlated with certain properties of a series of notched discs used to interrupt the air stream. 2. Adaptation in fifteen cases is found to be described by either one of two empirical formulas, or t = -k log f + C, for nine preparations t = a f-b, for six preparations where f is the per cent frequency at time t and -k and -b are constants defining the rate of adaptation.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Specific Afferent Impulses and Cutaneous SensibilityThe Journal of General Psychology, 1932
- Response of tactile receptors to intermittent stimulationThe Journal of Physiology, 1931
- Sensory discharges in single cutaneous nerve fibresThe Journal of Physiology, 1931
- The response of a single end organThe Journal of Physiology, 1931