CONTROL OF RAPID ARM MOVEMENTS WHEN TARGET POSITION IS ALTERED DURING SACCADIC SUPPRESSION

被引:25
作者
BLOUIN, J
TEASDALE, N
BARD, C
FLEURY, M
机构
[1] UNIV LAVAL, PERFORMANCE MOTRICE HUMAINE LAB, QUEBEC CITY, PQ G1K 7P4, CANADA
[2] UNIV AIX MARSEILLE 1, CONTROLES SENSORIMOTEURS LAB, CNRS, F-13397 MARSEILLE 13, FRANCE
[3] UNIV LAVAL, PERFORMANCE MOTRICE HUMAINE LAB, QUEBEC CITY, PQ, CANADA
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
AIMING MOVEMENT; DOUBLE-STEP; EFFERENT COPY; PROPRIOCEPTION; SACCADIC SUPPRESSION;
D O I
10.1080/00222895.1995.9941704
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
This experiment examined whether rapid arm movements can be corrected in response to a change in target position that occurs just prior to movement onset, during saccadic suppression of displacement. Because the threshold of retinal input reaches its highest magnitude at that time, displacement of the visual target of a saccade is not perceived. Subjects (N = 6) were instructed to perform very rapid arm movements toward visual targets located 16, 20, and 24 degrees from midline (on average, movement time was 208 ms). On some trials the 20 degrees target was displaced 4 degrees either to the right or to the left during saccadic suppression. For double-step trials, arm movements did not deviate from their original trajectory. Movement endpoints and movement structure (i.e., velocity-and acceleration-time profiles) were similar whether or not target displacements occurred, showing the failure of proprioceptive signals or internal feedback loops to correct the arm trajectory. Following this movement, terminal spatially oriented movements corrected the direction of the initial movement (as compared with the single-step control trials) when the target eccentricity decreased by 4 degrees. Subjects were unaware of these spatial corrections. Therefore, spatial corrections of hand position were driven by the goal level of the task, which was updated by oculomotor corrective responses when a target shift occurred.
引用
收藏
页码:114 / 122
页数:9
相关论文
共 54 条
[1]  
ABBS JH, 1984, J MOTOR BEHAV, V16, P195
[2]   VISUALLY GUIDED SWITCHING OF FORELIMB TARGET REACHING IN CATS [J].
ALSTERMARK, B ;
EIDE, E ;
GORSKA, T ;
LUNDBERG, A ;
PETTERSSON, LG .
ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, 1984, 120 (01) :151-153
[3]   QUANTITATIVE MEASUREMENT OF SACCADE AMPLITUDE, DURATION, AND VELOCITY [J].
BALOH, RW ;
SILLS, AW ;
KUMLEY, WE ;
HONRUBIA, V .
NEUROLOGY, 1975, 25 (11) :1065-1070
[4]  
BARD C, 1990, J HUM MOVEMENT STUD, V18, P37
[5]  
Becker W., 1989, NEUROBIOLOGY SACCADI, V3, P13
[6]  
BIGUER B, 1984, EXP BRAIN RES, V55, P462
[7]  
BLOUIN J, 1993, EXP BRAIN RES, V93, P324
[8]   THE MAPPING OF VISUAL SPACE IS FUNCTION OF THE STRUCTURE OF THE VISUAL-FIELD [J].
BLOUIN, J ;
TEASDALE, N ;
BARD, C ;
FLEURY, M .
BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES, 1992, 15 (02) :326-327
[9]   CONTRIBUTION OF RETINAL VERSUS EXTRARETINAL SIGNALS TOWARDS VISUAL LOCALIZATION IN GOAL-DIRECTED MOVEMENTS [J].
BOCK, O .
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 1986, 64 (03) :476-482
[10]   RELATION BETWEEN COGNITIVE AND MOTOR-ORIENTED SYSTEMS OF VISUAL POSITION PERCEPTION [J].
BRIDGEMAN, B ;
LEWIS, S ;
HEIT, G ;
NAGLE, M .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 1979, 5 (04) :692-700