Amplitude Scaling Compensates for Serial Delays in Correcting Eye and Arm Movements |
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Authors: | Graham K. Kerr R. J. Lockwood |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Human Movement Studies Queensland University of Technology , Brisbane, Australia;2. Department of Human Movement , The University of Western Australia , Nedlands |
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Abstract: | Spatial and metrical parameters of the eye and arm movements made by human subjects (N = 7) in response to visual targets that were stepped unexpectedly either once (single step) or twice (double step) were studied. For the double-step, the displacement of a visual target was decreased or increased in amplitude at intervals before and during a movement. Provided the second target step occurred more than 100 ms before the onset of movement, the amplitude of the subjects' first response was altered in the direction of the new target location. But this amplitude scaling was not always sufficient to reach the new target location, and a second corrective response was required. The latency in producing this second response was greatly increased above reaction time latencies of movements to single-step targets, especially when the target change occurred 100 ms or more before movement onset. These findings suggest that even though serial processing limitations delay the production of a second corrective response, continuous parallel processing of visual information enables the amplitude of the first response to be altered with minimal delay. This enables some degree of real-time continuous control by the visuomotor control system. |
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Keywords: | double-step stimuli parallel processing rapid arm movements reaction time saccades sensorimotor representation serial delays |
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