Perception and Reproduction of Force Direction in the Horizontal Plane
- 1 November 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 90 (5) , 3040-3053
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00271.2003
Abstract
In this study, we evaluated the capacity of human beings to perceive and reproduce forces applied to the hand. We tested for perceptive distortions and/or privileged directions in the performance of these two tasks. Subjects resisted a reference force applied by a joystick in a given direction, with instructions to keep the hand at a constant position. In a perception task, subjects subsequently resisted a second such force, the direction of which they could adjust with a potentiometer; the task was to reorient the second force to be in the same perceived direction as the reference. In a reproduction task, subjects were instructed to push against the now elastically constrained joystick with the same force that was required to resist the initially applied reference force. Twenty-four reference force directions in the horizontal plane were tested twice each. We observed systematic distortions in the reproduction of force direction that were not present in the perception task. We further observed that the distortions could be predicted by anisotropy of limb stiffness and could be affected by manipulating the mechanical impedance of the hand-joystick interaction. We conclude that human subjects specify and store forces to be applied by the hand not in terms of a perceived force vector, but rather in terms of the motor activity required to resist or produce the force—i.e., subjects possess a multi-dimensional “sense of effort.”Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Large systematic deviations in the haptic perception of parallelityPerception, 1999
- Visuo‐motor transformations for arm reachingEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 1998
- Equilibrium-Point Control Hypothesis Examined by Measured Arm Stiffness During Multijoint MovementScience, 1996
- An Internal Model for Sensorimotor IntegrationScience, 1995
- Perception of force and weight: Theory and research.Psychological Bulletin, 1986
- Effect of Modality-Specific Experience on Visual and Haptic Judgment of OrientationPerception, 1985
- Spatial Anisotropy in Intramodal and Cross-Modal Judgments of Stimulus Orientation: The Stability of the Oblique EffectPerception, 1980
- Sensation of static force in muscles of different lengthExperimental Neurology, 1979
- Perceptual orientational asymmetries: A comparison of visual and haptic spacePerception & Psychophysics, 1976
- Estimation of weights and tensions and apparent involvement of a “sense of effort”Experimental Neurology, 1974