Centre de Recherche en Neurosciences de Lyon, Trajectoires Team, Bron, France.
Centre d'Exploration de la Rétine Kléber, Ophthalmology Department, Lyon, France.
PLoS One. 2024 Jul 12;19(7):e0306630. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0306630. eCollection 2024.
Juggling is a very complex activity requiring motor, visual and coordination skills. Expert jugglers experience a "third eye" monitoring leftward and rightward ball zenith positions alternately, in the upper visual fields, while maintaining their gaze straight-ahead. This "third eye" reduces their motor noise (improved body stability and decrease in hand movement variability) as it avoids the numerous head and eye movements that add noise into the system and make trajectories more uncertain. Neuroimaging studies have shown that learning to juggle induces white and grey matter hypertrophy at the posterior intraparietal sulcus. Damage to this brain region leads to optic ataxia, a clinical condition characterised by peripheral pointing bias toward gaze position. We predicted that expert jugglers would, conversely, present better accuracy in a peripheral pointing task. The mean pointing accuracy of expert jugglers was better for peripheral pointing within the upper visual field, compatible with their subjective experience of the "third eye". Further analyses showed that experts exhibited much less between-subject variability than beginners, reinforcing the interpretation of a vertically asymmetrical calibration of peripheral space, characteristic of juggling and homogenous in the expert group. On the contrary, individual pointing variability did not differ between groups neither globally nor in any sector of space, showing that the reduced motor noise of experts in juggling did not transfer to pointing. It is concluded that the plasticity of the posterior intraparietal sulcus related to juggling expertise does not consist of globally improved visual-to-motor ability. It rather consists of peripheral space calibration by practicing horizontal covert shifts of the attentional spotlight within the upper visual field, between left and right ball zenith positions.
杂耍是一种非常复杂的活动,需要运动、视觉和协调技能。专家杂耍者在保持直视前方的同时,体验到一种“第三只眼”,交替监测左右球顶点位置,位于上视场中。这种“第三只眼”减少了他们的运动噪音(改善了身体稳定性并降低了手部运动的可变性),因为它避免了许多头部和眼部运动,这些运动会增加系统中的噪音,使轨迹更加不确定。神经影像学研究表明,学习杂耍会导致后顶内沟的白质和灰质肥大。该脑区损伤会导致视觉共济失调,这是一种以眼球位置为中心的外周指向偏差的临床病症。我们预测,专家杂耍者在周边指向任务中会表现出更好的准确性。专家杂耍者的平均指向准确性在视野上方的周边指向中更好,与他们对“第三只眼”的主观体验一致。进一步的分析表明,专家表现出的个体间变异性比初学者小得多,这加强了对周边空间垂直不对称校准的解释,这是杂耍的特征,在专家群体中是一致的。相反,个体指向变异性在全局或任何空间区域都没有差异,这表明专家在杂耍中运动噪音的降低并没有转移到指向。结论是,与杂耍专业知识相关的后顶内沟的可塑性不是视觉运动能力的整体提高,而是通过在左、右球顶点位置之间在上视场中练习注意力焦点的水平隐蔽转移来实现周边空间校准。