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Pointing movement visually controlled through a video display: adaptation to scale change

38

Citations

22

References

2000

Year

Abstract

This study concerns the adaptation of motor system when the production of movement was visually controlled through a video display. The subjects had to perform a pointing movement in two visual-feedback conditions: they could see the displacement of their hand or only the final location of the hand on the videoscreen. By changing the zoom of the camera, the amplitude of the movement perceived on the screen was increased, decreased or held equal to the actual movement. Results showed that the movement adapted quickly to the apparent distance changes. In the full visual-feedback condition, the adaptation was smaller in magnitude than in the partial visual-feedback condition. Even though the actual movement was always the same, the subjects thought they carried out different movements. Therefore, the subjects did not use kinematic information provided by the kinaesthetic system but essentially visual information furnished by the video-screen. Taken together, these results show that adaptation to scale changes does not allow the achievement of the perception of a single working space but seems rather specific to each scale.

References

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