van der Wel Robrecht P R D, Rosenbaum David A
Department of Psychology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2007 Jan;176(2):281-7. doi: 10.1007/s00221-006-0618-0.
Although locomotion and prehension are commonly coordinated in everyday life, little previous research has focused on this form of coordination. To address this neglected topic, we asked participants to stand a variable distance from a table, walk up to the table, and move an object on the tabletop to a new tabletop position, either to the right or to the left of the object's initial position and near or far from that initial position. For large manual displacements, which required a step after picking up the object, subjects preferred to stand on the foot opposite the direction of forthcoming manual displacement. By contrast, for small manual displacements, which did not require a step after picking up the object, subjects showed no support-leg preference when they grasped the object prior to manual displacement. The support-leg preferences at grasp time were apparently anticipated by participants as they walked up to the table, indicating considerable long-range planning of entire body positions associated with forthcoming object transfers.
尽管在日常生活中,移动和抓握动作通常是协调进行的,但此前很少有研究关注这种协调形式。为了探讨这个被忽视的课题,我们要求参与者站在距离桌子不同距离处,走到桌子旁,然后将桌面上的一个物体移动到桌面的一个新位置,该位置可以在物体初始位置的右侧或左侧,距离初始位置可近可远。对于需要拿起物体后迈一步的大幅度手部移动,受试者更倾向于用与即将进行的手部移动方向相反的脚站立。相比之下,对于拿起物体后不需要迈一步的小幅度手部移动,受试者在手部移动前抓住物体时,没有表现出对支撑腿的偏好。参与者在走向桌子时显然就已经预见到了抓握时支撑腿的偏好,这表明他们对与即将进行的物体转移相关的全身姿势进行了相当长远的规划。