Dual-finger preferred-speed tapping: effects of coordination mode and anatomical finger and limb pairings
Dual-finger preferred-speed tapping: effects of coordination mode and anatomical finger and limb pairings
Interlimb and interfinger coordination were examined on a dual-finger tapping paradigm in which 16 subjects performed at preferred frequencies. Three bimanual finger combinations, in random order (2 index; 2 middle; and 1 index and 1 middle), were performed in in-phase and antiphase coordination modes, in addition to 1 unimanual combination (antiphase index middle). Relative phase means were within 3% accuracy for all conditions. A lower tapping frequency was found in all antiphase vs. in-phase conditions, accompanied by lower phasing variability and lower intrafinger consistency in the antiphase. When frequency was changed from the preferred rate, the 2 coordination modes became more alike in variability and, within the same frequency range, demonstrated no significant differences. The bimanual mixed-fingers tapping tended to have significantly lower phasing values (a small fixed point drift) and higher tapping frequencies than the symmetric conditions. The unimanual task was similar to all other antiphase conditions. Changes in preferred frequency with different coordination modes may be related to differing perceptual informational constraints. Current models addressing natural frequencies of coupled oscillators do not account for the present data
325-339
Whitall, Jill
9761aefb-be80-4270-bc1f-0e726399376e
Forrester, Larry
f4cb091c-9475-40df-a515-0207765cecf9
Song, Suning
75931b37-60f3-4806-8203-95301218f04d
1999
Whitall, Jill
9761aefb-be80-4270-bc1f-0e726399376e
Forrester, Larry
f4cb091c-9475-40df-a515-0207765cecf9
Song, Suning
75931b37-60f3-4806-8203-95301218f04d
Whitall, Jill, Forrester, Larry and Song, Suning
(1999)
Dual-finger preferred-speed tapping: effects of coordination mode and anatomical finger and limb pairings.
Journal of Motor Behavior, 31 (4), .
(doi:10.1080/00222899909600998).
(PMID:11177641)
Abstract
Interlimb and interfinger coordination were examined on a dual-finger tapping paradigm in which 16 subjects performed at preferred frequencies. Three bimanual finger combinations, in random order (2 index; 2 middle; and 1 index and 1 middle), were performed in in-phase and antiphase coordination modes, in addition to 1 unimanual combination (antiphase index middle). Relative phase means were within 3% accuracy for all conditions. A lower tapping frequency was found in all antiphase vs. in-phase conditions, accompanied by lower phasing variability and lower intrafinger consistency in the antiphase. When frequency was changed from the preferred rate, the 2 coordination modes became more alike in variability and, within the same frequency range, demonstrated no significant differences. The bimanual mixed-fingers tapping tended to have significantly lower phasing values (a small fixed point drift) and higher tapping frequencies than the symmetric conditions. The unimanual task was similar to all other antiphase conditions. Changes in preferred frequency with different coordination modes may be related to differing perceptual informational constraints. Current models addressing natural frequencies of coupled oscillators do not account for the present data
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Published date: 1999
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 360779
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/360779
ISSN: 0022-2895
PURE UUID: 630625ae-3adc-4ff2-bb96-51315c2704ae
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Date deposited: 20 Dec 2013 16:38
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 15:42
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Author:
Jill Whitall
Author:
Larry Forrester
Author:
Suning Song
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