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A Visual Representation and the Control of Manual...
Journal article

A Visual Representation and the Control of Manual Aiming Movements

Abstract

Three experiments were conducted to determine if a representation of the movement environment is functional in the organization and control of limb movements, when direct visual contact with the environment is prevented. In Experiment 1, a visual rearrangement procedure was employed to show that a representation of the environment that provides inaccurate information about the spatial location of a target can disrupt manual target aiming. In Experiment 2, we demonstrated that spatial information about the position of a target can be destroyed by a visual pattern mask, supporting our claim that the representation is visual. A target-cuing procedure was used in Experiment 3 to show that representation of target position can be useful for premovement organization in a target-aiming task. Together our findings suggest that a short-lived visual representation of the movement environment may serve a useful role in the organization and control of limb movements.

Authors

Elliott D; Calvert R; Jaeger M; Jones R

Journal

Journal of Motor Behavior, Vol. 22, No. 3, pp. 327–346

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

January 1, 1990

DOI

10.1080/00222895.1990.10735517

ISSN

0022-2895

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