Motor Control Laboratory, Kinesiology Program, Arizona State University, Box 870701, Tempe, AZ 85287-0701, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2010 Dec;207(3-4):197-211. doi: 10.1007/s00221-010-2456-3. Epub 2010 Oct 22.
The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of accuracy constraints and termination requirements of hand movement on eye-hand coordination. Healthy adults performed two-segment eye and hand aiming movements to predetermined stationary targets. While two-segment eye movements were made to the first and second targets for all conditions, hand movements were varied across conditions. The first segment had two target sizes to alter accuracy constraints. There were three hand movement types with different termination requirements: (1) stop both at the first and at the second targets, (2) stop at the first target and discontinue, and (3) move through the first target and discontinue. The results showed that the initiation of saccades was moderately correlated with the initiation of hand movements, and both initiations changed in a similar fashion depending on various hand termination requirements. Amplitude of primary saccades and frequency of corrective saccades during the first segment were affected by the combined effects of accuracy constraints and hand termination requirements. These results suggest that the planning and execution of saccades are based in part on global task constraints related to the accuracy and termination demands of hand movements over the two segments. During the transition from the first to the second segment, the gaze was held on the first target until shortly after the pointing to that target was terminated, showing gaze anchoring. The gaze anchoring was prolonged due to the increased accuracy constraint of that target or by including pointing to the second target. However, the gaze anchoring was broken prior to the completion of pointing when the accuracy constraint was reduced and pointing to the second target was excluded. The observed modifications of gaze anchoring imply that the oculomotor system is functionally obligated to fixate a gaze to a pointing target only to the extent that successful completion of a pointing task is ensured by the actual completion or by a predictive assessment of pointing termination.
本研究旨在探讨手运动的准确性约束和终止要求对手眼协调的影响。健康成年人执行两段式眼和手向预定静止目标的瞄准运动。在所有条件下,两段式眼动都指向第一和第二目标,而手动运动则在条件之间变化。第一段有两种目标大小来改变准确性约束。有三种不同终止要求的手运动类型:(1)在第一和第二目标处都停止,(2)在第一目标处停止并停止,(3)穿过第一目标并停止。结果表明,眼跳的启动与手运动的启动中度相关,并且根据各种手终止要求,这两种启动都以相似的方式变化。第一阶段的主要眼跳幅度和校正眼跳频率受到准确性约束和手终止要求的综合影响。这些结果表明,眼跳的规划和执行部分基于与两段手运动的准确性和终止要求相关的全局任务约束。在手从第一段过渡到第二段的过程中,注视点保持在第一目标上,直到指向该目标的动作终止后不久,表现出注视点锚定。由于目标的准确性约束增加或包括指向第二目标,注视点锚定延长。然而,当准确性约束降低且不指向第二目标时,在指向动作完成之前,注视点锚定就会中断。观察到的注视点锚定的修改意味着眼动系统在功能上有义务将注视点固定在指向目标上,只有在通过实际完成或对指向动作终止的预测评估确保成功完成指向任务的情况下才可以这样做。