Temporal and Spatial Coupling of Point of Gaze and Hand Movements in Aiming
- 1 September 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Motor Behavior
- Vol. 30 (3) , 249-259
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00222899809601340
Abstract
Temporal and spatial coordination of both point of gaze (PG) and hand kinematics in a speeded aiming task toward an eccentrically positioned visual target were examined with the Optotrak 3D movement analysis system in tandem with the ASL head-mounted eye tracker. Subjects (N = 10) moved eyes, head, hand, and trunk freely. On the majority of trials, the PG pattern was a large initial saccade that undershot the target slightly, then 1 or more smaller corrective saccades to reach the target. The hand exhibited a similar pattern of first undershooting the target and then making small corrective movements. Previously (W. F. Helsen, J. L. Starkes, & M. J. Buekers, 1997), the ratio of PG and total hand response time (50%) was found to be an invariant feature of the movement. In line with those results, a striking temporal coupling was found between completion of the primary eye saccade and time to peak acceleration for the limb. Spatially, peak hand velocity coincided with completion of 50% of total movement distance. Those findings support a 2-component model of limb control.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- The relative contribution of retinal and extraretinal signals in determining the accuracy of reaching movements in normal subjects and a deafferented patientExperimental Brain Research, 1996
- Hand, Eye, and Head Coordination While Pointing to Perturbed TargetsJournal of Motor Behavior, 1994
- Visual regulation of manual aimingHuman Movement Science, 1993
- Asymmetries in the Regulation of Visually Guided AimingJournal of Motor Behavior, 1993
- Chapter 1 Visual Processing Time and the Control of MovementPublished by Elsevier ,1992
- Processing visual feedback information for movement control.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1981
- The Trajectories of Saccadic Eye MovementsScientific American, 1979
- The accuracy of aiming at a target: Some further evidence for a theory of intermittent controlActa Psychologica, 1972
- Further properties of the human saccadic system: Eye movements and correction saccades with and without visual fixation pointsVision Research, 1969
- Continuing and reversing the direction of responding movements: Some exceptions to the so-called "psychological refractory period."Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1968