Organization and learning of visual-motor information during different orders of limb movement: Step, velocity, acceleration.

Author(s):  
Joseph M. Notterman ◽  
Donald O. Weitzman
1982 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 723-750 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph M. Notterman ◽  
Daniel R. Tufano ◽  
Jeffrey Scott Hrapsky

The research described in this monograph uses control theory's pursuit-tracking paradigm of voluntary movement to identify several elementary psychomotor tasks. They are simple to administer and tap increasingly complex, nonverbal cognitive or perceptual attributes. Two series of experiments are reported. Study 1 examined the hypothesis that dissimilar arrays of individual differences, as determined through test-retest correlations, may exist among the same subjects: first, across various static and dynamic visual and motor “tasks” selected from the terms of control theory's tracking equations and, second, in the organization of these tasks as represented by pursuit tracking. The hypothesis could not be rejected. Study 2 determined that test-retest individual differences in visual-motor organization not only persisted in the absence of practice, but that they also withstood active intervention by practice. This study also showed that subjects differ reliably in their ability to plan, i.e., to take advantage of coherence in visual-motor information.


1979 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 579-585 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul L. Wang

A series of stimuli, words and faces, were presented tachistoscopically to 24 dextrals and 12 sinistrals. The stimuli were presented to one eye at a time and the subjects were instructed to respond to specific words or stimuli with a specific hand. The results indicate that (1) cerebral functional asymmetry is related to handedness; in the dextrals, the left hemisphere is more specialized in verbal recognition, while in the sinistrals, the right hemisphere is more specialized in recognizing non-verbal material. (2) An ipsilateral hand-and-eye combination is a valid method of measuring intrahemispheric information processing, provided that the tachistoscopically presented visual stimuli are capable of inciting specialized hemispheric function. The dominant relationship among the crossed and non-crossed visual pathways is discussed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiaqiu Sun ◽  
Ziqing Wang ◽  
Xing Tian

How different sensory modalities interact to shape perception is a fundamental question in cognitive neuroscience. Previous studies in audiovisual interaction have focused on abstract levels such as categorical representation (e.g., McGurk effect). It is unclear whether the cross-modal modulation can extend to low-level perceptual attributes. This study used motional manual gestures to test whether and how the loudness perception can be modulated by visual-motion information. Specifically, we implemented a novel paradigm in which participants compared the loudness of two consecutive sounds whose intensity changes around the just noticeable difference (JND), with manual gestures concurrently presented with the second sound. In two behavioral experiments and two EEG experiments, we investigated our hypothesis that the visual-motor information in gestures would modulate loudness perception. Behavioral results showed that the gestural information biased the judgment of loudness. More importantly, the EEG results demonstrated that early auditory responses around 100 ms after sound onset (N100) were modulated by the gestures. These consistent results in four behavioral and EEG experiments suggest that visual-motor processing can integrate with auditory processing at an early perceptual stage to shape the perception of a low-level perceptual attribute such as loudness, at least under challenging listening conditions.


2018 ◽  
Vol 19 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 183-199 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masako Myowa-Yamakoshi

Abstract This paper focuses on how human complex imitation and its developmental processes are related to the abilities for action representation, acquisition of symbols, and language. After overviewing the characteristics of imitation in chimpanzees and humans, I propose a model of imitation emphasizing how these two species differ in the ways they process visual-motor information. These differences may in turn contribute to core interspecies differences in higher-order cognitive functions, not only for bodily imitation but for action understanding through complex referential information from faces, sharing symbols, and language. This ‘developmental-comparative’ approach reveals the development of species-specific intelligences, and shows what is shared and not shared between humans and other primates. In doing so, we can obtain a more complete understanding of the emergence of the ‘language-ready brain’ in relation to its biological and evolutionary foundations.


2013 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-76
Author(s):  
Yukiko Nagai ◽  
Haruo Sakuma

Summary Study aim: This study reports on the characteristics of learners’ information-gathering processes when receiving visual motor information by examining the influence of differences in model upper limb placement on observer attention. Materials and Methods: The experiment, which was conducted with seven subjects, consisted of a visual oddball task in which subjects were instructed to push a button corresponding to the target image when it was presented on a screen. Two images were used in the task: a “front” image in which the upper limbs were placed in front of the trunk, and an “outside” image in which the upper limbs were placed outside the trunk. The variables measured were brainwaves during task performance, button push reaction time, and questionnaire responses. Brainwaves were recorded at the Fz, Cz, and Pz electrode sites and event-related potentials at the time of target image presentation were calculated. Grand mean waveforms and mean potentials were also compared for the P300. Results: Comparisons of P300 amplification grand mean waveforms and mean potentials revealed that amplification was greater in the front condition than in the outside condition. Conclusion: This finding indicates that differences in model upper limb placement greatly affect observer attention.


2014 ◽  
Vol 71 (11) ◽  
pp. 671-678
Author(s):  
Ramin Khatami

Das Spektrum der schlafmedizinischen Erkrankungen umfasst eine Reihe von speziellen neurologischen Erkrankungen, die sich durch eine hohe Prävalenz kennzeichnen oder die Lebensqualität stark beeinträchtigen. Dem praktisch tätigen Arzt kommt eine Schlüsselrolle in der Erkennung und Behandlung dieser Erkrankungen zu und sollte deshalb mit den wichtigsten schlafmedizinischen neurologischen Erkrankungen vertraut sein. Im Folgenden werden als wichtigste Vertreter, das Restless Legs Syndrom (mit oder ohne Periodic Limb Movement im Schlaf), Bewegungsstörungen im Schlaf (v. a. nonREM- und REM-Schlaf-Parasomnien), epileptische Anfälle im Schlaf sowie die Narkolepsie vorgestellt. Die Narkolepsie gilt zwar als seltene Erkrankung, ermöglicht aber als Modellerkrankung physiologische bzw. pathophysiologische Vorgänge der Schlaf-/Wachregulation zu verstehen. Eine zunehmende Bedeutung gewinnt auch die REM-Schlafverhaltensstörung, die als Frühzeichen einer neurodegenerativen Erkrankung (z. B. Synukleinopathien wie Parkinson-Erkrankung) auftreten kann. Eine frühzeitige Diagnose eröffnet hier die Möglichkeit in Zukunft neuroprotektive Substanzen einzusetzen.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Zinchenko ◽  
Jesse Snedeker
Keyword(s):  

Schlaf ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 01 (01) ◽  
pp. 9-13
Author(s):  
Samia Little Elk

Die Komorbidität von Depression und Schlafstörungen ist hoch. Dabei kann die Klärung, welche Störung der anderen vorausgegangen ist, bzw. der Ausschluss einer organischen Ursache, für die weitere Behandlung von großer Wichtigkeit sein. Als besonders häufige körperliche Ursache für Schlafstörungen, die wiederum eine depressive Symptomatik bedingen können, kommt dem Periodic-Limb-Movement-, dem Restless-Legs- sowie dem obstruktiven Schlafapnoesyndrom eine besondere Bedeutung zu. Eine ausführliche Medikamenten- und Alkoholanamnese kann Hinweise auf eine substanzinduzierte Insomnie geben. Schlafanstoßende Antidepressiva können neben verhaltenstherapeutischen Maßnahmen einen positiven Effekt auf die affektive Störung wie auch die Insomnie haben.


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