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Suppressing sensation during action across species and sensory modalities : predictive and non-predictive mechanisms of sensory modulation

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posted on 2025-11-26, 10:00 authored by Konstantina KilteniKonstantina Kilteni, Kathleen Cullen, David M. Schneider, Cornelius SchwarzCornelius Schwarz
<p dir="ltr">Perception and action are deeply intertwined processes that require the nervous system to distinguish between self-generated (reafferent) and externally generated (exafferent) sensory inputs. To maintain accurate perception during movement, the brain must attenuate predictable sensory consequences of its own actions while remaining sensitive to unexpected external events. Reafference attenuation is a temporally precise process that suppresses expected feedback, facilitating the detection of novel stimuli. This review examines reafference attenuation across species (rodents, non-human primates, and humans) and sensory systems (vestibular, auditory, and tactile). We also discuss sensory gating (or sensory suppression), a broader and often less selective mechanism that inhibits both self- and externally generated inputs. Although both mechanisms reduce sensory inflow during movement, they differ in function, specificity, and temporal dynamics, and despite growing insight into their underlying circuitry, important questions remain about their generality and implementation.</p>

Funding

The neuroscience of human tickle perception

European Research Council

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Strengthening process and outcomes of psychotherapies and leveraging academic-, policy-, and clinical partnerships to develop Routine Monitoring System in Kenya (SPARK)

Swedish Research Council

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History

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  • Accepted manuscript

Publication date

2025-11-12

Journal

J Neurosci

ISSN

0270-6474

eISSN

1529-2401

Volume

45

Issue

46

Article number

e1351252025

Language

  • eng

Research group

Somatosensation & Gargalesis – Konstantina Kilteni group [ID 51049904]

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