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Control of integrated task sequences shapes components of reaching

Control of integrated task sequences shapes components of reaching
Control of integrated task sequences shapes components of reaching
Reaching toward an object usually consists of a sequence of elemental actions. Using a reaching task sequence, the authors investigated how task elements of that sequence affected feedforward and feedback components of the reaching phase of the movement. Nine right-handed adults performed, with their dominant and nondominant hands, 4 tasks of different complexities: a simple reaching task; a reach-to-grasp task; a reach-to-grasp and lift object task; and a reach-to-grasp, lift, and place object task. Results showed that in the reach-to-grasp and lift object task more time was allocated to the feedforward component of the reach phase, while latency between the task elements decreased. We also found between-hand differences, supporting previous findings of increased efficiency of processing planning-related information in the preferred hand. The presence of task-related modifications supports the concept of contextual effects when planning a movement.
0022-2895
435-445
Viswanathan, Priya
fae06d00-96c8-46e4-bef2-1420844ce520
Whitall, Jill
9761aefb-be80-4270-bc1f-0e726399376e
Kagerer, Florian A.
34c2bf7a-bce8-4ac7-8772-d6b4705f4d50
Viswanathan, Priya
fae06d00-96c8-46e4-bef2-1420844ce520
Whitall, Jill
9761aefb-be80-4270-bc1f-0e726399376e
Kagerer, Florian A.
34c2bf7a-bce8-4ac7-8772-d6b4705f4d50

Viswanathan, Priya, Whitall, Jill and Kagerer, Florian A. (2016) Control of integrated task sequences shapes components of reaching. Journal of Motor Behavior, 48 (5), 435-445. (doi:10.1080/00222895.2015.1134431).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Reaching toward an object usually consists of a sequence of elemental actions. Using a reaching task sequence, the authors investigated how task elements of that sequence affected feedforward and feedback components of the reaching phase of the movement. Nine right-handed adults performed, with their dominant and nondominant hands, 4 tasks of different complexities: a simple reaching task; a reach-to-grasp task; a reach-to-grasp and lift object task; and a reach-to-grasp, lift, and place object task. Results showed that in the reach-to-grasp and lift object task more time was allocated to the feedforward component of the reach phase, while latency between the task elements decreased. We also found between-hand differences, supporting previous findings of increased efficiency of processing planning-related information in the preferred hand. The presence of task-related modifications supports the concept of contextual effects when planning a movement.

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Accepted/In Press date: 20 November 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 June 2016
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 402412
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/402412
ISSN: 0022-2895
PURE UUID: e074eb1f-fa0b-42d6-9484-5a6fe19b4391

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Date deposited: 08 Nov 2016 15:07
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:17

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Contributors

Author: Priya Viswanathan
Author: Jill Whitall
Author: Florian A. Kagerer

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