Effect before cause: supramodal recalibration of sensorimotor timing.

Our motor actions normally generate sensory events, but how do we know which events were self generated and which have external causes? Here we use temporal adaptation to investigate the processing stage and generality of our sensorimotor timing estimates.Adaptation to artificially-induced delays be...

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Main Authors: James Heron, James V M Hanson, David Whitaker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-11-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2766625?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f362f91df0c745b9b0bca1b03399d0212020-11-24T21:30:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032009-11-01411e768110.1371/journal.pone.0007681Effect before cause: supramodal recalibration of sensorimotor timing.James HeronJames V M HansonDavid WhitakerOur motor actions normally generate sensory events, but how do we know which events were self generated and which have external causes? Here we use temporal adaptation to investigate the processing stage and generality of our sensorimotor timing estimates.Adaptation to artificially-induced delays between action and event can produce a startling percept--upon removal of the delay it feels as if the sensory event precedes its causative action. This temporal recalibration of action and event occurs in a quantitatively similar manner across the sensory modalities. Critically, it is robust to the replacement of one sense during the adaptation phase with another sense during the test judgment.Our findings suggest a high-level, supramodal recalibration mechanism. The effects are well described by a simple model which attempts to preserve the expected synchrony between action and event, but only when causality indicates it is reasonable to do so. We further demonstrate that this model successfully characterises related adaptation data from outside the sensorimotor domain.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2766625?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James Heron
James V M Hanson
David Whitaker
spellingShingle James Heron
James V M Hanson
David Whitaker
Effect before cause: supramodal recalibration of sensorimotor timing.
PLoS ONE
author_facet James Heron
James V M Hanson
David Whitaker
author_sort James Heron
title Effect before cause: supramodal recalibration of sensorimotor timing.
title_short Effect before cause: supramodal recalibration of sensorimotor timing.
title_full Effect before cause: supramodal recalibration of sensorimotor timing.
title_fullStr Effect before cause: supramodal recalibration of sensorimotor timing.
title_full_unstemmed Effect before cause: supramodal recalibration of sensorimotor timing.
title_sort effect before cause: supramodal recalibration of sensorimotor timing.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2009-11-01
description Our motor actions normally generate sensory events, but how do we know which events were self generated and which have external causes? Here we use temporal adaptation to investigate the processing stage and generality of our sensorimotor timing estimates.Adaptation to artificially-induced delays between action and event can produce a startling percept--upon removal of the delay it feels as if the sensory event precedes its causative action. This temporal recalibration of action and event occurs in a quantitatively similar manner across the sensory modalities. Critically, it is robust to the replacement of one sense during the adaptation phase with another sense during the test judgment.Our findings suggest a high-level, supramodal recalibration mechanism. The effects are well described by a simple model which attempts to preserve the expected synchrony between action and event, but only when causality indicates it is reasonable to do so. We further demonstrate that this model successfully characterises related adaptation data from outside the sensorimotor domain.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2766625?pdf=render
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