Fitts’ law when errors are not allowed: Quantification of reciprocating trajectories and estimating information processing

There are circumstances in which humans are required to move in environments wherein accuracy should be maximized, such as golf putting or surgeons’ hand movements during surgical procedures. Fitts’ law expresses human movement by movement time and task difficulty, which is determined by one's...

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Main Authors: Hiroki Murakami, Norimasa Yamada
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-10-01
Series:Acta Psychologica
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001691821001682
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spelling doaj-4da5b819dfea49fdb934ca6b1c84ecc02021-09-15T04:20:05ZengElsevierActa Psychologica0001-69182021-10-01220103418Fitts’ law when errors are not allowed: Quantification of reciprocating trajectories and estimating information processingHiroki Murakami0Norimasa Yamada1Graduate School of Health and Sport Sciences, Chukyo University, Toyota, Japan; Corresponding author.School of Health and Sport Sciences, Chukyo University, Toyota, JapanThere are circumstances in which humans are required to move in environments wherein accuracy should be maximized, such as golf putting or surgeons’ hand movements during surgical procedures. Fitts’ law expresses human movement by movement time and task difficulty, which is determined by one's distance from the target and the targets’ size. Additionally, this law is considered as the most universal expression of human movement. However, it is calculated based on the possibility of failure, mainly because a tap error ratio of ~4% occurred in the continuous tap task used by Fitts. Thus, this study aimed to examine how movement changes can occur with an error rate of 0%, and whether Fitts’ law can be applied to human movement in such a setting. The continuous tap task was performed under two conditions: a conventional one, and a new condition where the devised error rate becomes 0%. To measure movement change during tapping, the variation of the entire trajectory was quantified by principal component analysis, and changes in the quantified values of the trajectory toward the target were examined. For the new condition, no tapping errors occurred; the quantified value of the trajectory toward the target decreased compared with the conventional condition. It was considered that this related to the process of feedback control, and that this process related to an increase in movement time per tap. We suggest that increased information processing may account for these changes. Furthermore, the Fitts’ law model, shown from the regression lines for movement time and difficulty, displayed a high fit for both conditions. However, it was difficult to evaluate movement time with the highest index of difficulty for the new condition using the model for the conventional condition. Therefore, we conclude that the conventional model may need to be modified for conditions where the error rate is 0%.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S00016918210016822300
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hiroki Murakami
Norimasa Yamada
spellingShingle Hiroki Murakami
Norimasa Yamada
Fitts’ law when errors are not allowed: Quantification of reciprocating trajectories and estimating information processing
Acta Psychologica
2300
author_facet Hiroki Murakami
Norimasa Yamada
author_sort Hiroki Murakami
title Fitts’ law when errors are not allowed: Quantification of reciprocating trajectories and estimating information processing
title_short Fitts’ law when errors are not allowed: Quantification of reciprocating trajectories and estimating information processing
title_full Fitts’ law when errors are not allowed: Quantification of reciprocating trajectories and estimating information processing
title_fullStr Fitts’ law when errors are not allowed: Quantification of reciprocating trajectories and estimating information processing
title_full_unstemmed Fitts’ law when errors are not allowed: Quantification of reciprocating trajectories and estimating information processing
title_sort fitts’ law when errors are not allowed: quantification of reciprocating trajectories and estimating information processing
publisher Elsevier
series Acta Psychologica
issn 0001-6918
publishDate 2021-10-01
description There are circumstances in which humans are required to move in environments wherein accuracy should be maximized, such as golf putting or surgeons’ hand movements during surgical procedures. Fitts’ law expresses human movement by movement time and task difficulty, which is determined by one's distance from the target and the targets’ size. Additionally, this law is considered as the most universal expression of human movement. However, it is calculated based on the possibility of failure, mainly because a tap error ratio of ~4% occurred in the continuous tap task used by Fitts. Thus, this study aimed to examine how movement changes can occur with an error rate of 0%, and whether Fitts’ law can be applied to human movement in such a setting. The continuous tap task was performed under two conditions: a conventional one, and a new condition where the devised error rate becomes 0%. To measure movement change during tapping, the variation of the entire trajectory was quantified by principal component analysis, and changes in the quantified values of the trajectory toward the target were examined. For the new condition, no tapping errors occurred; the quantified value of the trajectory toward the target decreased compared with the conventional condition. It was considered that this related to the process of feedback control, and that this process related to an increase in movement time per tap. We suggest that increased information processing may account for these changes. Furthermore, the Fitts’ law model, shown from the regression lines for movement time and difficulty, displayed a high fit for both conditions. However, it was difficult to evaluate movement time with the highest index of difficulty for the new condition using the model for the conventional condition. Therefore, we conclude that the conventional model may need to be modified for conditions where the error rate is 0%.
topic 2300
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001691821001682
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