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Journal ArticleDOI

Signal-dependent noise determines motor planning

Chris Harris, +1 more
- 20 Aug 1998 - 
- Vol. 394, Iss: 6695, pp 780-784
TLDR
This theory provides a simple and powerful unifying perspective for both eye and arm movement control and accurately predicts the trajectories of both saccades and arm movements and the speed–accuracy trade-off described by Fitt's law.
Abstract
When we make saccadic eye movements or goal-directed arm movements, there is an infinite number of possible trajectories that the eye or arm could take to reach the target1,2. However, humans show highly stereotyped trajectories in which velocity profiles of both the eye and hand are smooth and symmetric for brief movements3,4. Here we present a unifying theory of eye and arm movements based on the single physiological assumption that the neural control signals are corrupted by noise whose variance increases with the size of the control signal. We propose that in the presence of such signal-dependent noise, the shape of a trajectory is selected to minimize the variance of the final eye or arm position. This minimum-variance theory accurately predicts the trajectories of both saccades and arm movements and the speed–accuracy trade-off described by Fitt's law5. These profiles are robust to changes in the dynamics of the eye or arm, as found empirically6,7. Moreover, the relation between path curvature and hand velocity during drawing movements reproduces the empirical ‘two-thirds power law’8,9. This theory provides a simple and powerful unifying perspective for both eye and arm movement control.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Neural Control Adaptation to Motor Noise Manipulation

TL;DR: The nervous system adapts to virtual increases in motor noise by increasing antagonistic co-activation, and this preserves motor performance, which is suggested to explain in part why older adults and many patient populations have greater antagonism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prehension of half-full and half-empty glasses: time and history effects on multi-digit coordination

TL;DR: The results suggest that synergy indices may be highly sensitive to changes in a task variable and that effects of such changes persist after the changes are over, and support an earlier hypothesis on a trade-off between synergies at the two levels of a hierarchy.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Human control of dynamically complex objects

TL;DR: In this paper, a haptic display showed the pendulum bob moving in a semicircular cup (the cart was hidden), mimicking a ball rolling in a cup, and subjects were asked to move the cart between two spatial targets at the same frequency.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motor cost affects the decision of when to shift gaze for guiding movement

TL;DR: The results suggest that temporal gaze decisions are affected by motor costs associated with step-to-step demands of the environment, and provide insight into what affects the coordination between the eyes and feet for the control of stable and accurate foot placement while walking.
Journal ArticleDOI

Advancing brain-machine interfaces: Moving beyond linear state space models

TL;DR: It is argued that incorporating various non-linear characteristics of normal motor behavior will be an important next step in advancing BMIs to more closely match natural motor performance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The information capacity of the human motor system in controlling the amplitude of movement.

TL;DR: The motor system in the present case is defined as including the visual and proprioceptive feedback loops that permit S to monitor his own activity, and the information capacity of the motor system is specified by its ability to produce consistently one class of movement from among several alternative movement classes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The coordination of arm movements: an experimentally confirmed mathematical model.

TL;DR: A mathematical model is formulated which is shown to predict both the qualitative features and the quantitative details observed experimentally in planar, multijoint arm movements, and is successful only when formulated in terms of the motion of the hand in extracorporal space.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Internal Model for Sensorimotor Integration

TL;DR: A sensorimotor integration task was investigated in which participants estimated the location of one of their hands at the end of movements made in the dark and under externally imposed forces, providing direct support for the existence of an internal model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adaptive representation of dynamics during learning of a motor task

TL;DR: The investigation of how the CNS learns to control movements in different dynamical conditions, and how this learned behavior is represented, suggests that the elements of the adaptive process represent dynamics of a motor task in terms of the intrinsic coordinate system of the sensors and actuators.
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