Internal models and intermittency: A theoretical account of human tracking behavior
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Biological Cybernetics
- Vol. 58 (2) , 101-112
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00364156
Abstract
This paper concerns the use of tracking studies to test a theoretical account of the information processing performed by the human CNS during control of movement. The theory provides a bridge between studies of reaction time and continuous tracking. It is proposed that the human CNS includes neuronal circuitry to compute inverse internal models of the multiple input, multiple output, dynamic, nonlinear relationships between outgoing motor commands and their resulting perceptual consequences. The inverse internal models are employed during movement execution to transform preplanned trajectories of desired perceptual consequences into appropriate outgoing motor commands to achieve them. A finite interval of time is required by the CNS to preplan the desired perceptual consequences of a movement and it does not commence planning a new movement until planning of the old one has been completed. This behavior introduces intermittency into the planning of movements. In this paper we show that the gain and phase frequency response characteristics of the human operator in a visual pursuit tracking task can be derived theoretically from these assumptions. By incorporating the effects of internal model inaccuracy and of speed-accuracy trade-off in performance, it is shown that various aspects of experimentally measured tracking behavior can be accounted for.This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Performance of Concurrent Tasks: A Psychophysiological Analysis of the Reciprocity of Information-Processing ResourcesScience, 1983
- Discrete versus continuous stage models of human information processing: In search of partial output.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1982
- Different difficulty manipulations interact differently with task emphasis: Evidence for multiple resources.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1982
- On data-limited and resource-limited processesCognitive Psychology, 1975
- The psychological refractory period effect: Only half the double-stimulation story?Psychological Bulletin, 1970
- Movement control in skilled motor performance.Psychological Bulletin, 1968
- Information capacity of discrete motor responses.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1964
- THE INTERMITTENCY OF CONTROL MOVEMENTS AND THE PSYCHOLOGICAL REFRACTORY PERIOD1The British Journal of Psychology. General Section, 1948
- THEORY OF THE HUMAN OPERATOR IN CONTROL SYSTEMSThe British Journal of Psychology. General Section, 1948
- THEORY OF THE HUMAN OPERATOR IN CONTROL SYSTEMS1The British Journal of Psychology. General Section, 1947