Heuer H, Kleinsorge T, Spijkers W, Steglich W
Institut für Arbeitsphysiologie an der Universität Dortmund, Ardeystrasse 67, 44139 Dortmund, Germany.
J Mot Behav. 2001 Mar;33(1):67-85. doi: 10.1080/00222890109601904.
The authors examined the hypothesis that the phasic and the static cross-talk effects found in bimanual movements with different target amplitudes originate at different functional levels of motor control, which implies that the effects can be dissociated experimentally. When the difference between the short and the long amplitudes assigned to the 2 hands of 12 participants was decreased, the static effect disappeared, In contrast, the phasic effect, which can be observed only at short preparation intervals, did not disappear; although it became smaller in absolute terms, in relative terms it did not. In addition, the authors compared the time course of amplitude variability and examined the correlation between left hand and right hand amplitudes. The disappearance of the phasic amplitude assimilation at increasing preparation intervals turned out to be delayed relative to the decline of the correlation between amplitudes. That finding suggests that the assimilation of mean amplitudes and the correlation between left hand and right hand amplitudes are not fully equivalent indicators of intermanual interactions, but may indicate different kinds of inter-limb coupling.
在具有不同目标幅度的双手运动中发现的相位和静态串扰效应源自运动控制的不同功能水平,这意味着这些效应可以通过实验进行分离。当分配给12名参与者两只手的短幅度和长幅度之间的差异减小时,静态效应消失。相比之下,仅在短准备间隔时才能观察到的相位效应并未消失;尽管其绝对值变小了,但相对而言并未变小。此外,作者比较了幅度变异性的时间进程,并研究了左手和右手幅度之间的相关性。结果表明,随着准备间隔增加,相位幅度同化的消失相对于幅度之间相关性的下降有所延迟。这一发现表明,平均幅度的同化以及左手和右手幅度之间的相关性并非完全等效的双手交互指标,但可能表明不同类型的肢体间耦合。