Bardy B G, Laurent M
University of the Mediterranean, Marseille, France.
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform. 1998 Jun;24(3):963-77. doi: 10.1037//0096-1523.24.3.963.
How body orientation is controlled during somersaulting was investigated in 2 experiments that analyzed the kinematics of 223 backward standing somersaults. In Experiment 1, open-loop, initial-condition (flight duration), and prospective (time to contact, or TC1) control strategies were tested as candidates for the regulation of body moment of inertia during the jump. Decreasing between-trials variability of body orientation over time as well as a negative correlation between body angular velocity and TC1 suggested that the moment of inertia was regulated prospectively. In Experiment 2, the visual basis for this regulation was examined by asking experts and novices to execute somersaults either with eyes closed or open. Results showed that the prospective regulation observed in the vision condition disappeared in the no-vision condition with the experts, arguing in favor of a visual control during the jump. Such a coupling was absent with the novices, thus illustrating the role played by the perception-action cycle in the learning process.
在两项实验中,研究了后空翻过程中身体方向是如何控制的,这两项实验分析了223次向后站立式空翻的运动学。在实验1中,测试了开环、初始条件(飞行持续时间)和前瞻性(接触时间,或TC1)控制策略,作为跳跃过程中调节身体转动惯量的候选策略。随着时间推移,各次试验间身体方向的变异性降低,以及身体角速度与TC1之间的负相关表明,转动惯量是前瞻性调节的。在实验2中,通过要求专家和新手闭眼或睁眼进行空翻,研究了这种调节的视觉基础。结果表明,在有视觉条件下观察到的前瞻性调节在专家的无视觉条件下消失了,这支持了跳跃过程中的视觉控制。新手则不存在这种耦合,从而说明了感知-动作循环在学习过程中所起的作用。