Department of Neurology, University Hospital Zurich, Frauenklinikstrasse 26, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland.
BMC Neurosci. 2012 Sep 22;13:114. doi: 10.1186/1471-2202-13-114.
The subjective haptic vertical (SHV) task requires subjects to adjust the roll orientation of an object, mostly in the roll plane, in such a way that it is parallel to perceived direction of gravity. Previously we found a tendency for clockwise rod rotations to deviate counter-clockwise and vice versa, indicating hysteresis. However, the contributing factors remained unclear. To clarify this we characterized the SHV in terms of handedness, hand used, direction of hand rotation, type of grasping (wrap vs. precision grip) and gender, and compared findings with perceived straight-ahead (PSA). Healthy subjects repetitively performed adjustments along SHV (n = 21) and PSA (n = 10) in complete darkness.
For both SHV and PSA significant effects of the hand used and the direction of rod/plate rotation were found. The latter effect was similar for SHV and PSA, leading to significantly larger counter-clockwise shifts (relative to true earth-vertical and objective straight-ahead) for clockwise rotations compared to counter-clockwise rotations irrespective of the handedness and the type of grip. The effect of hand used, however, was opposite in the two tasks: while the SHV showed a counter-clockwise bias when the right hand was used and no bias for the left hand, in the PSA a counter-clockwise bias was obtained for the left hand without a bias for the right hand. No effects of grip and handedness (studied for SHV only) on accuracy were observed, however, SHV precision was significantly (p < 0.005) better in right-handed subjects compared to left-handed subjects and in male subjects.
Unimanual haptic tasks require control for the hand used and the type of grip as these factors significantly affect task performance. Furthermore, aligning objects with the SHV and PSA resulted in systematic direction-dependent deviations that could not be attributed to handedness, the hand used, or the type of grip. These deviations are consistent with hysteresis and are likely not related to gravitational pull, as they were observed in both planes tested, i.e. parallel and perpendicular to gravity. Short-term adaptation that shifts attention towards previous adjustment positions may provide an explanation for such biases of spatial orientation in both the horizontal and frontal plane.
主观触觉垂直(SHV)任务要求受试者调整物体的滚动方向,主要在滚动平面内,使其与感知的重力方向平行。此前,我们发现棒的顺时针旋转有逆时针偏差的趋势,反之亦然,这表明存在滞后现象。然而,造成这种现象的因素尚不清楚。为了阐明这一点,我们根据手性、使用的手、手的旋转方向、握持方式(包裹式与精确握持式)和性别来描述 SHV,并将结果与感知的正前方(PSA)进行比较。健康受试者在完全黑暗中反复进行 SHV(n=21)和 PSA(n=10)的调整。
SHV 和 PSA 都存在使用的手和棒/板旋转方向的显著影响。后一种影响在 SHV 和 PSA 中相似,导致顺时针旋转时相对于真实的地球垂直和客观的正前方出现明显的逆时针移位,而逆时针旋转时则没有这种移位,与手性和握持方式无关。然而,手的使用的影响在两个任务中是相反的:在 SHV 中,当右手使用时会出现逆时针偏差,而左手使用时则没有偏差,而在 PSA 中,左手使用时会出现逆时针偏差,而右手使用时则没有偏差。然而,握持方式和手性(仅在 SHV 中研究)对准确性没有影响,但是,与左手使用的受试者相比,右手使用的受试者的 SHV 精度明显(p<0.005)更好,并且男性受试者的 SHV 精度也明显更好。
单手持触觉任务需要对手的使用和握持方式进行控制,因为这些因素会显著影响任务表现。此外,将物体与 SHV 和 PSA 对齐会导致系统的、依赖于方向的偏差,这些偏差不能归因于手性、使用的手或握持方式。这些偏差与滞后现象一致,并且不太可能与重力有关,因为它们在测试的两个平面上都有观察到,即平行于和垂直于重力。将注意力转移到之前的调整位置的短期适应可能为水平和正面平面中这种空间定向的偏差提供了解释。