Publication | Closed Access
Role of Limb and Target Vision in the Online Control of Memory-Guided Reaches
123
Citations
89
References
2005
Year
Target VisionMotor ControlMemory-guided ReachesAttentionSocial SciencesOnline ControlRehabilitation RoboticsKinesiologyMemoryRobot LearningKinematicsHealth SciencesSensorimotor ControlCognitive ScienceRehabilitationVisual PathwayVision ResearchPerception-action LoopVisual FunctionSensorimotor TransformationEye TrackingNeuroscienceHuman MovementTarget RepresentationFine Motor Control
This investigation tested the proposal that a "highly accurate" and temporally unstable stored target representation is available to the motor system for the online control of memory-guided reaches. Participants reached to a target that was: (a) visible during the response, (b) extinguished at movement onset, and (c) occluded for 0, 500, 1,500 and 2,500 ms in advance of response cueing. Additionally, trials were performed with (i.e., limb visible) and without (i.e., limb occluded) vision of the reaching limb. Results showed that limb occluded trials undershot the target location in each target condition, and were characterized by a primarily offline mode of control. In contrast, limb visible trials showed a consistent level of endpoint accuracy for each target condition and elicited more online reaching corrections than limb occluded trials. It is therefore proposed that a reasonably accurate and temporally stable stored target representation can be combined with vision of the moving limb for the online control of memory-guided reaches.
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