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The multiple process model of goal-directed...
Journal article

The multiple process model of goal-directed aiming/reaching: insights on limb control from various special populations

Abstract

Several years ago, our research group forwarded a model of goal-directed reaching and aiming that describes the processes involved in the optimization of speed, accuracy, and energy expenditure Elliott et al. (Psychol Bull 136:1023–1044, 2010). One of the main features of the model is the distinction between early impulse control, which is based on a comparison of expected to perceived sensory consequences, and late limb-target control that involves a spatial comparison of limb and target position. Our model also emphasizes the importance of strategic behaviors that limit the opportunity for worst-case or inefficient outcomes. In the 2010 paper, we included a section on how our model can be used to understand atypical aiming/reaching movements in a number of special populations. In light of a recent empirical and theoretical update of our model Elliott et al. (Neurosci Biobehav Rev 72:95-110, 2017), here we consider contemporary motor control work involving typical aging, Down syndrome, autism spectrum disorder, and tetraplegia with tendon-transfer surgery. We outline how atypical limb control can be viewed within the context of the multiple-process model of goal-directed reaching and aiming, and discuss the underlying perceptual-motor impairment that results in the adaptive solution developed by the specific group.

Authors

Elliott D; Lyons J; Hayes SJ; Burkitt JJ; Hansen S; Grierson LEM; Foster NC; Roberts JW; Bennett SJ

Journal

Experimental Brain Research, Vol. 238, No. 12, pp. 2685–2699

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

December 1, 2020

DOI

10.1007/s00221-020-05952-2

ISSN

0014-4819

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