Eye-hand synergy and intermittent behaviors during target-directed tracking with visual and non-visual information.

Visual feedback and non-visual information play different roles in tracking of an external target. This study explored the respective roles of the visual and non-visual information in eleven healthy volunteers who coupled the manual cursor to a rhythmically moving target of 0.5 Hz under three sensor...

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Main Authors: Chien-Ting Huang, Ing-Shiou Hwang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3517518?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-515dcb37bbde451e8ec9ae3a8f65f9432020-11-25T01:47:13ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01712e5141710.1371/journal.pone.0051417Eye-hand synergy and intermittent behaviors during target-directed tracking with visual and non-visual information.Chien-Ting HuangIng-Shiou HwangVisual feedback and non-visual information play different roles in tracking of an external target. This study explored the respective roles of the visual and non-visual information in eleven healthy volunteers who coupled the manual cursor to a rhythmically moving target of 0.5 Hz under three sensorimotor conditions: eye-alone tracking (EA), eye-hand tracking with visual feedback of manual outputs (EH tracking), and the same tracking without such feedback (EHM tracking). Tracking error, kinematic variables, and movement intermittency (saccade and speed pulse) were contrasted among tracking conditions. The results showed that EHM tracking exhibited larger pursuit gain, less tracking error, and less movement intermittency for the ocular plant than EA tracking. With the vision of manual cursor, EH tracking achieved superior tracking congruency of the ocular and manual effectors with smaller movement intermittency than EHM tracking, except that the rate precision of manual action was similar for both types of tracking. The present study demonstrated that visibility of manual consequences altered mutual relationships between movement intermittency and tracking error. The speed pulse metrics of manual output were linked to ocular tracking error, and saccade events were time-locked to the positional error of manual tracking during EH tracking. In conclusion, peripheral non-visual information is critical to smooth pursuit characteristics and rate control of rhythmic manual tracking. Visual information adds to eye-hand synchrony, underlying improved amplitude control and elaborate error interpretation during oculo-manual tracking.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3517518?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chien-Ting Huang
Ing-Shiou Hwang
spellingShingle Chien-Ting Huang
Ing-Shiou Hwang
Eye-hand synergy and intermittent behaviors during target-directed tracking with visual and non-visual information.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Chien-Ting Huang
Ing-Shiou Hwang
author_sort Chien-Ting Huang
title Eye-hand synergy and intermittent behaviors during target-directed tracking with visual and non-visual information.
title_short Eye-hand synergy and intermittent behaviors during target-directed tracking with visual and non-visual information.
title_full Eye-hand synergy and intermittent behaviors during target-directed tracking with visual and non-visual information.
title_fullStr Eye-hand synergy and intermittent behaviors during target-directed tracking with visual and non-visual information.
title_full_unstemmed Eye-hand synergy and intermittent behaviors during target-directed tracking with visual and non-visual information.
title_sort eye-hand synergy and intermittent behaviors during target-directed tracking with visual and non-visual information.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Visual feedback and non-visual information play different roles in tracking of an external target. This study explored the respective roles of the visual and non-visual information in eleven healthy volunteers who coupled the manual cursor to a rhythmically moving target of 0.5 Hz under three sensorimotor conditions: eye-alone tracking (EA), eye-hand tracking with visual feedback of manual outputs (EH tracking), and the same tracking without such feedback (EHM tracking). Tracking error, kinematic variables, and movement intermittency (saccade and speed pulse) were contrasted among tracking conditions. The results showed that EHM tracking exhibited larger pursuit gain, less tracking error, and less movement intermittency for the ocular plant than EA tracking. With the vision of manual cursor, EH tracking achieved superior tracking congruency of the ocular and manual effectors with smaller movement intermittency than EHM tracking, except that the rate precision of manual action was similar for both types of tracking. The present study demonstrated that visibility of manual consequences altered mutual relationships between movement intermittency and tracking error. The speed pulse metrics of manual output were linked to ocular tracking error, and saccade events were time-locked to the positional error of manual tracking during EH tracking. In conclusion, peripheral non-visual information is critical to smooth pursuit characteristics and rate control of rhythmic manual tracking. Visual information adds to eye-hand synchrony, underlying improved amplitude control and elaborate error interpretation during oculo-manual tracking.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3517518?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT chientinghuang eyehandsynergyandintermittentbehaviorsduringtargetdirectedtrackingwithvisualandnonvisualinformation
AT ingshiouhwang eyehandsynergyandintermittentbehaviorsduringtargetdirectedtrackingwithvisualandnonvisualinformation
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