Goodale M A, Pelisson D, Prablanc C
Nature. 1986;320(6064):748-50. doi: 10.1038/320748a0.
When we reach towards an object that suddenly appears in our peripheral visual field, not only does our arm extend towards the object, but our eyes, head and body also move in such a way that the image of the object falls on the fovea. Popular models of how reaching movements are programmed have argued that while the first part of the limb movement is ballistic, subsequent corrections to the trajectory are made on the basis of dynamic feedback about the relative positions of the hand and the target provided by central vision. These models have assumed that the adjustments are dependent on seeing the hand moving with respect to the target. Here we present evidence that a change in the position of a visual target during a reaching movement can modify the trajectory even when vision of the hand is prevented. Moreover, these dynamic corrections to the trajectory of the moving limb occur without the subject perceiving the change in target location. These findings demonstrate that visual feedback about the relative position of the hand and target is not necessary for visually driven corrections in reaching to occur, and the mechanisms that maintain the apparent stability of a target in space are dissociable from those that mediate the visuomotor output directed at that target.
当我们伸手去够突然出现在周边视野中的物体时,不仅我们的手臂会向该物体伸展,而且我们的眼睛、头部和身体也会以这样一种方式移动,即物体的图像落在中央凹上。关于伸手动作如何编程的流行模型认为,虽然肢体运动的第一部分是弹道式的,但随后对轨迹的修正基于中央视觉提供的关于手和目标相对位置的动态反馈。这些模型假定这些调整依赖于看到手相对于目标的移动。在这里,我们提供证据表明,在伸手动作过程中视觉目标位置的变化即使在阻止看到手的情况下也能改变轨迹。此外,对移动肢体轨迹的这些动态修正发生时,受试者并未察觉到目标位置的变化。这些发现表明,对于视觉驱动的伸手动作修正而言,关于手和目标相对位置的视觉反馈并非必要,并且在空间中维持目标明显稳定性的机制与介导针对该目标的视觉运动输出的机制是可分离的。