There and back again: putting the vectorial movement planning hypothesis to a critical test

Based on psychophysical evidence about how learning of visuomotor transformation generalizes, it has been suggested that movements are planned on the basis of movement direction and magnitude, i.e., the vector connecting movement origin and targets. This notion is also known under the term “vectoria...

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Main Authors: Eva-Maria Kobak, Simone Cardoso de Oliveira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2014-04-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/342.pdf
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spelling doaj-ad08517e138242f0a901b9355ff9d7892020-11-24T22:38:57ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592014-04-012e34210.7717/peerj.342342There and back again: putting the vectorial movement planning hypothesis to a critical testEva-Maria Kobak0Simone Cardoso de Oliveira1Bernstein Center Freiburg, University of Freiburg, GermanyBernstein Center Freiburg, University of Freiburg, GermanyBased on psychophysical evidence about how learning of visuomotor transformation generalizes, it has been suggested that movements are planned on the basis of movement direction and magnitude, i.e., the vector connecting movement origin and targets. This notion is also known under the term “vectorial planning hypothesis”. Previous psychophysical studies, however, have included separate areas of the workspace for training movements and testing the learning. This study eliminates this confounding factor by investigating the transfer of learning from forward to backward movements in a center-out-and-back task, in which the workspace for both movements is completely identical. Visual feedback allowed for learning only during movements towards the target (forward movements) and not while moving back to the origin (backward movements). When subjects learned the visuomotor rotation in forward movements, initial directional errors in backward movements also decreased to some degree. This learning effect in backward movements occurred predominantly when backward movements featured the same movement directions as the ones trained in forward movements (i.e., when opposite targets were presented). This suggests that learning was transferred in a direction specific way, supporting the notion that movement direction is the most prominent parameter used for motor planning.https://peerj.com/articles/342.pdfReaching movementsMotor learningVisuomotor rotationMotor adaptationGeneralizationMotor control
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eva-Maria Kobak
Simone Cardoso de Oliveira
spellingShingle Eva-Maria Kobak
Simone Cardoso de Oliveira
There and back again: putting the vectorial movement planning hypothesis to a critical test
PeerJ
Reaching movements
Motor learning
Visuomotor rotation
Motor adaptation
Generalization
Motor control
author_facet Eva-Maria Kobak
Simone Cardoso de Oliveira
author_sort Eva-Maria Kobak
title There and back again: putting the vectorial movement planning hypothesis to a critical test
title_short There and back again: putting the vectorial movement planning hypothesis to a critical test
title_full There and back again: putting the vectorial movement planning hypothesis to a critical test
title_fullStr There and back again: putting the vectorial movement planning hypothesis to a critical test
title_full_unstemmed There and back again: putting the vectorial movement planning hypothesis to a critical test
title_sort there and back again: putting the vectorial movement planning hypothesis to a critical test
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2014-04-01
description Based on psychophysical evidence about how learning of visuomotor transformation generalizes, it has been suggested that movements are planned on the basis of movement direction and magnitude, i.e., the vector connecting movement origin and targets. This notion is also known under the term “vectorial planning hypothesis”. Previous psychophysical studies, however, have included separate areas of the workspace for training movements and testing the learning. This study eliminates this confounding factor by investigating the transfer of learning from forward to backward movements in a center-out-and-back task, in which the workspace for both movements is completely identical. Visual feedback allowed for learning only during movements towards the target (forward movements) and not while moving back to the origin (backward movements). When subjects learned the visuomotor rotation in forward movements, initial directional errors in backward movements also decreased to some degree. This learning effect in backward movements occurred predominantly when backward movements featured the same movement directions as the ones trained in forward movements (i.e., when opposite targets were presented). This suggests that learning was transferred in a direction specific way, supporting the notion that movement direction is the most prominent parameter used for motor planning.
topic Reaching movements
Motor learning
Visuomotor rotation
Motor adaptation
Generalization
Motor control
url https://peerj.com/articles/342.pdf
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