Plamondon R
Département de Génie Electrique, Ecole Polytechnique de Montréal, QC, Canada.
Acta Psychol (Amst). 1993 Mar;82(1-3):89-101. doi: 10.1016/0001-6918(93)90006-d.
This paper presents a model that explains the origin of the asymmetric bell-shaped velocity profiles generally observed in handwriting and other rapid movements. Applying the central limit theorem to describe the converging behavior of a sequence of dependent neural and muscular networks, it is shown that velocity profiles can be described by log-normal curves. An analysis-by-synthesis experiment is reported to support the model and to specify its mathematical implementation. Practical implications of this approach are discussed at the end of the paper to provide an analytical definition of a stroke, to clarify the concept of fluency and to suggest a powerful method for segmenting complex movements, particularly cursive script.
本文提出了一个模型,该模型解释了在手写及其他快速运动中普遍观察到的不对称钟形速度曲线的起源。应用中心极限定理来描述一系列相关神经和肌肉网络的收敛行为,结果表明速度曲线可用对数正态曲线来描述。报告了一项分析合成实验,以支持该模型并确定其数学实现方式。本文结尾讨论了这种方法的实际意义,以提供笔画的分析定义,阐明流畅性的概念,并提出一种强大的方法来分割复杂运动,尤其是草书。