Adamovich S V, Berkinblit M B, Fookson O, Poizner H
Institute for Problems of Information Transmission, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 101447, Russia.
J Neurophysiol. 1998 Jun;79(6):2833-46. doi: 10.1152/jn.1998.79.6.2833.
This study investigated the influence of different modalities of target information (visual, kinesthetic) on the accuracy, kinematics, and interjoint coordination of pointing movements to remembered targets. The targets were presented by a robot arm in five locations in three-dimensional (3D) space, either as a point of light in a dark room ("visual" condition), or kinesthetically. Relative pointing accuracy in the visual compared with kinesthetic conditions was influenced by the target location: pointing errors were the largest for the visual targets most eccentric relative to the subject's head. In addition, for the two most lateral targets, the final arm positions were, on average, closer to the center than the targets in the visual condition and farther from the center than the targets in the kinesthetic conditions. This result suggests that the pattern of errors in the visual condition described elsewhere ("range effect") may derive from visual processing rather than motor planning and implementation. Two modes of kinesthetic target presentation were utilized. During "passive" kinesthetic presentation of the target, the experimenter moved the subject's relaxed arm. Alternately, in "active" kinesthetic presentation of the target, the subject actively (with minimal help from the experimenter) moved his arm. No visual feedback was allowed in either kinesthetic condition. The variability in the final fingertip position was significantly smaller in the active condition than in the passive condition. In contrast, variability in the final values of arm orientation angles did not differ significantly in the active and passive conditions. This apparent contradiction may be resolved by the fact that, for the given target location, the influence of the deviation of these angles in the given trial from their average values on the position of the fingertip tended to be mutually compensated, and this tendency was stronger in the active condition. Our analysis of the correlations among the arm orientation angles and of the relationship between the initial and final arm configurations suggests that the kinesthetic conditions enabled the implementation of a mixture of strategies for achieving accuracy. The first strategy is to use a specific memory of an adequate arm configuration (that assumed during target presentation), such that accuracy is achieved by using this memory as a template. The second strategy is to use synergistically coordinating joint angles, such that accuracy is achieved by focusing on a specific endpoint that can be reached by a range of equivalent arm positions. The latter strategy was better utilized in the active condition. In conclusion, our results indicate that human subjects can use diverse sensory information to achieve comparable final accuracy, but that the details of the strategies employed differ with the kind of information available.
本研究调查了不同形式的目标信息(视觉、动觉)对指向记忆目标的动作准确性、运动学以及关节间协调性的影响。目标由机器人手臂在三维(3D)空间的五个位置呈现,呈现方式要么是在黑暗房间中的一个光点(“视觉”条件),要么是动觉呈现。与动觉条件相比,视觉条件下的相对指向准确性受目标位置影响:相对于受试者头部最偏心的视觉目标的指向误差最大。此外,对于两个最外侧的目标,平均而言,最终手臂位置比视觉条件下的目标更靠近中心,比动觉条件下的目标离中心更远。这一结果表明,其他地方描述的视觉条件下的误差模式(“范围效应”)可能源于视觉处理而非运动规划和执行。采用了两种动觉目标呈现模式。在目标的“被动”动觉呈现过程中,实验者移动受试者放松的手臂。另外,在目标的“主动”动觉呈现过程中,受试者主动(在实验者极少帮助下)移动他的手臂。在两种动觉条件下均不允许有视觉反馈。主动条件下最终指尖位置的变异性显著小于被动条件。相比之下,主动和被动条件下手臂方位角最终值的变异性没有显著差异。这种明显的矛盾可能通过以下事实得到解决:对于给定的目标位置,在给定试验中这些角度与其平均值的偏差对指尖位置的影响往往相互抵消,并且这种趋势在主动条件下更强。我们对手臂方位角之间的相关性以及初始和最终手臂构型之间关系的分析表明,动觉条件能够实现多种提高准确性的策略组合。第一种策略是使用对适当手臂构型的特定记忆(目标呈现期间假定的构型),从而通过将此记忆用作模板来实现准确性。第二种策略是协同协调关节角度,从而通过专注于一系列等效手臂位置都能到达的特定端点来实现准确性。后一种策略在主动条件下得到了更好的运用。总之,我们的结果表明,人类受试者可以使用多种感觉信息来实现相当的最终准确性,但所采用策略的细节因可用信息的种类而异。