Hu Y, Eagleson R, Goodale M A
Department of Psychology, The University of Western Ontario, London, Canada.
Exp Brain Res. 1999 May;126(1):109-16. doi: 10.1007/s002210050720.
We examined the effect on manual prehension of introducing a 5-s delay between viewing a target object and initiating a grasping movement. Subjects were tested in four conditions: three involved grasping the object and a fourth involved estimating its size. In the main experimental condition (Open Loop Delay), subjects viewed a target object for 300 ms, but did not initiate a grasping movement until an auditory signal was presented 5 s later. In this condition, subjects had to rely on stored visual information for guiding their grasp after the delay. In another condition (Open Loop), subjects initiated their grasping movement as soon as the target appeared. In both of these open-loop conditions, subjects reached out and grasped the object without seeing their hand. In the third grasping condition (Closed Loop), the target object and the hand were visible throughout the reach. In the three grasping conditions, subjects were instructed to pick up the object across its width using their index finger and thumb. In a final condition (Perceptual Estimation), subjects gave a manual estimate of the object's width with their index finger and thumb after viewing the object for 300 ms. In all four conditions, subjects were presented with a target object in which the height, length and width were independently varied from trial to trial. The results of the experiment indicated that reaching and grasping movements made in the Open-Loop and Closed-Loop conditions did not differ in any kinematic measures. In contrast, when subjects performed in the Open-Loop Delay condition, their reaches took significantly longer and achieved peak velocity proportionately earlier. As well, their maximum grip aperture was significantly larger. In addition, reaching movements in all three grasping conditions were affected by both the object's width (the 'relevant' dimension) and height. The manual estimates in the Perceptual-Estimation condition, however, reflected only the object's width. These results, together with evidence from other studies, suggest that motor actions performed after a delay use different transformations than those used for 'real-time' grasping. We argue that the stored visual information used to drive delayed actions arises from a perceptual rather than a visuomotor analysis of the target object.
我们研究了在看到目标物体与开始抓握动作之间引入5秒延迟对手动抓握的影响。受试者在四种条件下接受测试:三种涉及抓握物体,第四种涉及估计物体大小。在主要实验条件(开环延迟)下,受试者观看目标物体300毫秒,但直到5秒后出现听觉信号才开始抓握动作。在这种条件下,延迟后受试者必须依靠存储的视觉信息来指导抓握。在另一种条件(开环)下,目标一出现受试者就开始抓握动作。在这两种开环条件下,受试者伸手抓握物体时都看不到自己的手。在第三种抓握条件(闭环)下,在整个伸手过程中目标物体和手都是可见的。在这三种抓握条件下,受试者被指示用食指和拇指跨物体宽度拿起物体。在最后一种条件(感知估计)下,受试者在观看物体300毫秒后用食指和拇指手动估计物体的宽度。在所有四种条件下,每次试验向受试者呈现的目标物体的高度、长度和宽度都是独立变化的。实验结果表明,在开环和闭环条件下进行的伸手和抓握动作在任何运动学指标上都没有差异。相比之下,当受试者在开环延迟条件下执行任务时,他们的伸手动作花费的时间明显更长,并且峰值速度相应地更早达到。此外,他们的最大抓握孔径明显更大。此外,在所有三种抓握条件下的伸手动作都受到物体宽度(“相关”维度)和高度的影响。然而,感知估计条件下的手动估计仅反映了物体的宽度。这些结果,连同其他研究的证据,表明延迟后执行的运动动作使用了与“实时”抓握不同的转换方式。我们认为,用于驱动延迟动作的存储视觉信息来自对目标物体的感知分析而非视觉运动分析。