Fath Aaron J, Marks Brian S, Snapp-Childs Winona, Bingham Geoffrey P
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University, 1101 E 10th St, Bloomington, IN, 47405, USA,
Exp Brain Res. 2014 Dec;232(12):3821-31. doi: 10.1007/s00221-014-4072-0. Epub 2014 Aug 22.
Locomoting-to-reach to a target is a common visuomotor approach behavior that consists of two nested component actions: locomotion and reaching. The information and control strategies that guide locomotion and reaching in isolation are well studied, but their interaction during locomoting-to-reach behavior has received little attention. We investigated the role of proportional rate control in unifying these components into one action. Individuals use this control strategy with hand-centric disparity-based τ information to guide seated reaching (Anderson and Bingham in Exp Brain Res 205:291-306. doi: 10.1007/s00221-010-2361-9 , 2010) and use it with sequential information to perform targeted locomotion to bring an outstretched arm and hand to a target; first with eye-centric τ information and then hand-centric τ information near the target (Anderson and Bingham in Exp Brain Res 214:631-644. doi: 10.1007/s00221-011-2865-y , 2011). In the current study, participants performed two tasks: locomoting to bring a rigidly outstretched arm and hand to a target (handout), and locomoting to initiate and guide a reach to a target (locomoting-to-reach). Movement trajectories were analyzed. Results show that participants used proportional rate control throughout both tasks, in the sequential manner that was found by Anderson and Bingham (Exp Brain Res 214:631-644. doi: 10.1007/s00221-011-2865-y , 2011). Individual differences were found in the moment at which this information switch occurred in the locomoting-to-reach task. Some participants appeared to switch to proportional rate control with hand-τ once the hand came into view and others switched once the reaching component was complete and the arm was fully outstretched. In the locomoting-to-reach task, participants consistently initiated reaches when eye-τ specified a time-to-contact of 1.0 s. Proportional rate control provides a solution to the degrees-of-freedom problem in the classic manner, by making multiple things one.
移动并伸手够到目标是一种常见的视觉运动趋近行为,它由两个嵌套的组成动作构成:移动和伸手。指导移动和伸手的信息及控制策略已被深入研究,但它们在移动并伸手行为中的相互作用却很少受到关注。我们研究了比例速率控制在将这些组成部分统一为一个动作中的作用。个体使用这种控制策略,结合以手部为中心的基于视差的τ信息来指导坐姿下的伸手动作(安德森和宾厄姆,《实验脑研究》205:291 - 3:6,doi: 10.1007/s00221 - 010 - 2361 - 9,2010年),并结合顺序信息来执行有目标的移动,以将伸出的手臂和手移动到目标位置;首先使用以眼睛为中心的τ信息,然后在接近目标时使用以手部为中心的τ信息(安德森和宾厄姆,《实验脑研究》214:631 - 644,doi: 10.1007/s00221 - 011 - 2865 - y,2011年)。在当前研究中,参与者执行两项任务:移动以使伸出的僵硬手臂和手够到目标(手持任务),以及移动以发起并指导伸手够到目标(移动并伸手任务)。对运动轨迹进行了分析。结果表明,参与者在两项任务中都全程使用比例速率控制,采用的是安德森和宾厄姆(《实验脑研究》214:631 - 644,doi: 10.1007/s00221 - 011 - 2865 - y,2011年)所发现的顺序方式。在移动并伸手任务中,发现这种信息切换发生的时刻存在个体差异。一些参与者似乎一旦手进入视野就切换到使用以手部τ为基础的比例速率控制,而另一些参与者则在伸手动作完成且手臂完全伸出后才切换。在移动并伸手任务中,当眼睛τ指定接触时间为1.0秒时,参与者始终会发起伸手动作。比例速率控制以经典方式为自由度问题提供了一个解决方案,即将多个动作整合为一个。