Jakobson L S, Goodale M A
Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada.
Exp Brain Res. 1991;86(1):199-208. doi: 10.1007/BF00231054.
Past studies of the kinematics of human prehension have shown that varying object size affects the maximum opening of the hand, while varying object distance affects the kinematic profile of the reaching limb. These data contributed to the formulation of a theory that the reaching and grasping components of human prehension reflect the output of two independent, though temporally coupled, motor programs (Jeannerod 1984). In the first experiment of the present study, subjects were required to reach out and grasp objects, with or without on-line, visual feedback. Object size and distance were covaried in a within-subjects design, and it was found that both grip formation and reach kinematics were affected by the manipulation of either variable. These data suggest that the control mechanisms underlying transport of the limb and grip formation are affected by similar task constraints. It was also observed that when visual feedback was unavailable after movement onset subjects showed an exaggerated opening of their hands, although grip size continued to be scaled for object size. The question remained as to whether the larger opening of the hand during no-feedback trials reflected the lack of opportunity to fine-tune the opening of the hand on-line, or the adoption of a strategy designed to increase tolerance for initial programming errors. To address this question, a second experiment was carried out in which we manipulated the predictability of visual feedback by presenting feedback and no-feedback trials in a random order. In contrast to the situation in which feedback and no-feedback trials were presented in separate blocks of trials (Exp. 1), in the randomly-ordered series of trials presented in Exp. 2, subjects always behaved as if they were reaching without vision, even on trials where visual feedback was continuously available. These findings suggest that subjects adopt different strategies on the basis of the predictability of visual feedback, although there is nothing to suggest that this takes place at a conscious, or voluntary, level. The results of both experiments are consistent with the notion of a hierarchically-organized motor control center, responsible for optimizing performance under a variety of conditions through the coordination of different effector systems and the anticipation of operating constraints.
过去对人类抓握运动学的研究表明,改变物体大小会影响手的最大开度,而改变物体距离会影响伸手肢体的运动学特征。这些数据促成了一种理论的形成,即人类抓握的伸手和抓握成分反映了两个独立但时间上耦合的运动程序的输出(让纳罗德,1984年)。在本研究的第一个实验中,要求受试者伸手抓取物体,有无在线视觉反馈均可。物体大小和距离在受试者内设计中进行协变,结果发现抓握形成和伸手运动学均受任一变量操纵的影响。这些数据表明,肢体运输和抓握形成背后的控制机制受相似任务约束的影响。还观察到,运动开始后若没有视觉反馈,受试者的手会过度张开,尽管抓握大小仍会根据物体大小进行调整。问题依然存在,即无反馈试验中手的更大开度是反映缺乏在线微调手开度的机会,还是采用了一种旨在增加对初始编程错误容忍度的策略。为解决这个问题,进行了第二个实验,我们通过随机呈现反馈和无反馈试验来操纵视觉反馈的可预测性。与在单独试验块中呈现反馈和无反馈试验的情况(实验1)不同,在实验2呈现的随机顺序试验系列中,受试者总是表现得好像他们是在无视觉的情况下伸手,即使在视觉反馈一直可用的试验中也是如此。这些发现表明,受试者根据视觉反馈的可预测性采用不同策略,尽管没有迹象表明这是在有意识或自愿的层面上发生的。两个实验的结果都与一个分层组织的运动控制中心的概念一致,该中心负责通过协调不同效应器系统和预测操作约束来优化各种条件下的表现。