Center for Visual Science, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York 14627, USA.
J Neurosci. 2011 Jan 19;31(3):928-43. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4240-10.2011.
Human behavior in natural tasks consists of an intricately coordinated dance of cognitive, perceptual, and motor activities. Although much research has progressed in understanding the nature of cognitive, perceptual, or motor processing in isolation or in highly constrained settings, few studies have sought to examine how these systems are coordinated in the context of executing complex behavior. Previous research has suggested that, in the course of visually guided reaching movements, the eye and hand are yoked, or linked in a nonadaptive manner. In this work, we report an experiment that manipulated the demands that a task placed on the motor and visual systems, and then examined in detail the resulting changes in visuomotor coordination. We develop an ideal actor model that predicts the optimal coordination of vision and motor control in our task. On the basis of the predictions of our model, we demonstrate that human performance in our experiment reflects an adaptive response to the varying costs imposed by our experimental manipulations. Our results stand in contrast to previous theories that have assumed a fixed control mechanism for coordinating vision and motor control in reaching behavior.
人类在自然任务中的行为由认知、感知和运动活动的错综复杂的协调舞蹈组成。尽管在理解认知、感知或运动处理的本质方面已经取得了许多进展,但是很少有研究试图研究这些系统在执行复杂行为的背景下是如何协调的。以前的研究表明,在视觉引导的伸手运动过程中,眼睛和手是被束缚的,或者以非适应性的方式连接。在这项工作中,我们报告了一项实验,该实验操纵了任务对运动和视觉系统的要求,然后详细研究了由此产生的运动协调变化。我们开发了一个理想的演员模型,该模型预测了我们任务中视觉和运动控制的最佳协调。根据我们模型的预测,我们证明了我们实验中的人类表现反映了对实验操作施加的不同成本的自适应响应。我们的结果与以前的理论形成对比,这些理论假设在伸手行为中协调视觉和运动控制的固定控制机制。