Suppr超能文献

运动运动学对预测观察到的动作时机的影响。

The effect of movement kinematics on predicting the timing of observed actions.

作者信息

Colling Lincoln J, Thompson William F, Sutton John

机构信息

School of Psychology, Australian Catholic University, Brisbane, Australia,

出版信息

Exp Brain Res. 2014 Apr;232(4):1193-206. doi: 10.1007/s00221-014-3836-x. Epub 2014 Jan 23.

Abstract

The ability to predict the actions of other agents is vital for joint action tasks. Recent theory suggests that action prediction relies on an emulator system that permits observers to use a model of their own movement kinematics to predict the actions of other agents. If this is the case, then people should be more accurate at generating predictions about actions that are similar to their own. We tested this hypothesis in two experiments in which participants were required to predict the occurrence and timing of particular critical points in an observed action. In Experiment 1, we employed a self/other prediction paradigm in which prediction accuracy for recordings of self-generated movements was compared with prediction accuracy for recordings of other-generated movements. As expected, prediction was more accurate for recordings of self-generated actions because in this case the movement kinematics of the observer and observed stimuli are maximally similar. In Experiment 1, people were able to produce actions at their own tempo and, therefore, the results might be explained in terms of self-similarity in action production tempo rather than in terms of movement kinematics. To control for this possibility in Experiment 2, we compared prediction accuracy for stimuli that were matched in tempo but differed only in terms of kinematics. The results showed that participants were more accurate when predicting actions with a human kinematic profile than tempo-matched stimuli that moved with non-human kinematics. Finally, in Experiment 3, we confirmed that the results of Experiment 2 cannot be explained by human-like stimuli containing a slowing down phase before the critical points. Taken together, these findings provide further support for the role of motor emulation in action prediction, and they suggest that the action prediction mechanism produces output that is available rapidly and available to drive action control suggesting that it can plausibly support joint action coordination.

摘要

预测其他主体的行为能力对于联合行动任务至关重要。近期理论表明,行为预测依赖于一个模拟系统,该系统允许观察者使用自身运动运动学模型来预测其他主体的行为。如果是这样的话,那么人们在生成与自身相似行为的预测时应该会更准确。我们在两个实验中对这一假设进行了测试,实验要求参与者预测观察到的行为中特定关键点的出现和时间。在实验1中,我们采用了自我/他人预测范式,将自我产生运动的记录的预测准确性与他人产生运动的记录的预测准确性进行比较。正如预期的那样,自我产生行为的记录的预测更准确,因为在这种情况下,观察者和观察到的刺激的运动运动学最为相似。在实验1中,人们能够按照自己的节奏产生行为,因此,结果可能可以用行为产生节奏的自我相似性来解释,而不是用运动运动学来解释。为了在实验2中控制这种可能性,我们比较了节奏匹配但仅在运动学方面不同的刺激的预测准确性。结果表明,与以非人类运动学移动的节奏匹配刺激相比,参与者在预测具有人类运动学特征的行为时更准确。最后,在实验3中,我们证实实验2的结果不能用在关键点之前包含减速阶段的类人刺激来解释。综上所述,这些发现为运动模拟在行为预测中的作用提供了进一步的支持,并且表明行为预测机制产生的输出能够快速获得并可用于驱动行为控制,这表明它可以合理地支持联合行动协调。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验