Content area

Abstract

We investigated the role of visual feedback of task performance in visuomotor adaptation. Participants produced novel two degrees of freedom movements (elbow flexion-extension, forearm pronation-supination) to move a cursor towards visual targets. Following trials with no rotation, participants were exposed to a 60° visuomotor rotation, before returning to the non-rotated condition. A colour cue on each trial permitted identification of the rotated/non-rotated contexts. Participants could not see their arm but received continuous and concurrent visual feedback (CF) of a cursor representing limb position or post-trial visual feedback (PF) representing the movement trajectory. Separate groups of participants who received CF were instructed that online modifications of their movements either were, or were not, permissible as a means of improving performance. Feedforward-mediated performance improvements occurred for both CF and PF groups in the rotated environment. Furthermore, for CF participants this adaptation occurred regardless of whether feedback modifications of motor commands were permissible. Upon re-exposure to the non-rotated environment participants in the CF, but not PF, groups exhibited post-training aftereffects, manifested as greater angular deviations from a straight initial trajectory, with respect to the pre-rotation trials. Accordingly, the nature of the performance improvements that occurred was dependent upon the timing of the visual feedback of task performance. Continuous visual feedback of task performance during task execution appears critical in realising automatic visuomotor adaptation through a recalibration of the visuomotor mapping that transforms visual inputs into appropriate motor commands.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Real-time error detection but not error correction drives automatic visuomotor adaptation
Publication title
Volume
201
Issue
2
Pages
191-207
Publication year
2010
Publication date
Mar 2010
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
Place of publication
Heidelberg
Country of publication
Netherlands
ISSN
00144819
e-ISSN
14321106
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
Document type
Corrections/Retraction
Accession number
19830412
ProQuest document ID
215126813
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/real-time-error-detection-not-correction-drives/docview/215126813/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
Springer-Verlag 2010
Last updated
2023-11-24
Database
ProQuest One Academic