Buekers M J, Helsen W F
Department of Kinesiology, FLDK Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium.
Cortex. 2000 Sep;36(4):507-19. doi: 10.1016/s0010-9452(08)70535-5.
The main purpose of this study was to examine whether manual asymmetries could be related to the superiority of the left hemisphere/right hand system in processing visual feedback. Subjects were tested when performing single (Experiment 1) and reciprocal (Experiment 2) aiming movements under different vision conditions (full vision, 20 ms on/180 ms off, 10/90, 40/160, 20/80, 60/120, 20/40). Although in both experiments right hand advantages were found, manual asymmetries did not interact with intermittent vision conditions. Similar patterns of results were found across vision conditions for both hands. These data do not support the visual feedback processing hypothesis of manual asymmetry. Motor performance is affected to the same extent for both hand systems when vision is degraded.
本研究的主要目的是检验手动不对称是否与左半球/右手系统在处理视觉反馈方面的优势有关。在不同视觉条件(全视觉、20毫秒开启/180毫秒关闭、10/90、40/160、20/80、60/120、20/40)下进行单方向(实验1)和往复式(实验2)瞄准动作时对受试者进行测试。尽管在两个实验中都发现了右手优势,但手动不对称并未与间歇性视觉条件相互作用。双手在不同视觉条件下都发现了相似的结果模式。这些数据不支持手动不对称的视觉反馈处理假说。当视觉下降时,两个手部系统的运动表现受到的影响程度相同。