Fisk J D, Goodale M A
Exp Brain Res. 1985;60(1):159-78. doi: 10.1007/BF00237028.
The spatial and temporal organization of unrestricted limb movements directed to small visual targets was examined in two separate experiments. Videotape records of the subjects' performance allowed us to analyze the trajectory of the limb movement through 3-dimensional space. Horizontal eye movements during reaching were measured by infrared corneal reflection. In both experiments, the trajectories of the different reaches approximated straight line paths and the velocity profile revealed an initial rapid acceleration followed by a prolonged period of deceleration. In Experiment 1, in which the target light was presented to the right or left of a central fixation point at either 10 degrees or 20 degrees eccentricity, the most consistent differences were observed between reaches directed across the body axis to targets presented in the contralateral visual field and reaches directed at ipsilateral targets. Ipsilateral reaches were initiated more quickly, were completed more rapidly, and were more accurate than contralateral reaches. While these findings suggest that hemispherically organized neural systems are involved in the programming of visually guided limb movements, it was not clear whether the inefficiency of the contralateral movements was due to reaching across the body axis or reaching into the visual hemifield contralateral to the hand being used. Therefore, in Experiment 2, the position of the fixation point was varied such that the effects of visual field and body axis could be disembedded. In this experiment, the kinematics of the reaching movement were shown to be independent of the point of visual fixation and varied only as a function of the laterality of the target position relative to the body axis. This finding suggests that the kinematics of a reaching movement are determined by differences in the processing of neural systems associated with motor output, after the target has been localized in space. The effect of target laterality on response latency and accuracy, however, could not be attributed to a single frame of reference, or to a simple additive effect of both. These findings illustrate the complex integration of visual spatial information which must take place in order to reach accurately to goal objects in extrapersonal space. Comparison of ocular and manual performance revealed a close relationship between movement latency for both motor systems. Thus, rightward-going eye movements to a given target were initiated more quickly when accompanied by reaches with the right hand than when they were accompanied by reaches with the left hand.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
在两个独立实验中,对指向小视觉目标的无限制肢体运动的时空组织进行了研究。受试者表现的录像记录使我们能够分析肢体运动在三维空间中的轨迹。伸手过程中的水平眼动通过红外角膜反射进行测量。在两个实验中,不同伸手动作的轨迹近似直线路径,速度曲线显示出初始的快速加速,随后是长时间的减速。在实验1中,目标光在中央注视点右侧或左侧以10度或20度的偏心度呈现,在指向对侧视野中呈现的目标并穿过身体轴线的伸手动作与指向同侧目标的伸手动作之间观察到最一致的差异。同侧伸手动作启动更快,完成更快,且比 contralateral伸手动作更准确。虽然这些发现表明半球组织的神经系统参与了视觉引导肢体运动的编程,但尚不清楚对侧动作的低效是由于穿过身体轴线还是伸向与所使用手对侧的视觉半视野。因此,在实验2中,改变了注视点的位置,以便能够区分视野和身体轴线的影响。在这个实验中,伸手动作的运动学被证明与视觉注视点无关,仅随目标位置相对于身体轴线的侧向性而变化。这一发现表明,在目标在空间中定位后,伸手动作的运动学由与运动输出相关的神经系统处理差异决定。然而,目标侧向性对反应潜伏期和准确性的影响不能归因于单一参照系,也不能归因于两者的简单相加效应。这些发现说明了为了准确伸向体外空间中的目标物体,视觉空间信息必须进行的复杂整合。眼部和手部表现的比较揭示了两个运动系统的运动潜伏期之间的密切关系。因此,当右手伸手时,对给定目标的向右眼动比左手伸手时启动更快。(摘要截断于400字)