Bimanual circling in deafferented patients: evidence for a role of visual forward models

Mechsner F, Stenneken P, Cole J, Aschersleben G, Prinz W (2007)
Journal of Neuropsychology 1(2): 259-282.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
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Autor*in
Mechsner, Franz; Stenneken, PriscaUniBi; Cole, Jonathan; Aschersleben, Gisa; Prinz, Wolfgang
Abstract / Bemerkung
The present study investigated the role of ideation and visual feedback, and their interaction in movement control in the absence of somatosensory feedback, with the hypothesis that visual imagery and internal visual models may play a crucial role in performance even without feedback. Two chronically deafferented participants, GL and IW, circled bimanually two occluded cranks first without vision and then with hand-congruent and hand-incongruent visual feedback provided by visible flags. Without vision, GL was unable to circle the cranks. In contrast, IW performed spontaneously a symmetric pattern. Again without feedback, IW performed an instructed symmetric crank pattern well, but was unable to perform anti-phase cranking. With hand-congruent visual feedback, GL and IW were able to perform both symmetric and antiphase movements, with symmetry being more accurate. Visual feedback during preceding trials made possible trials without visual feedback in GL and improved antiphase trials in IW. Frequency-transformed incongruent visual feedback resulted in poor performance in part due to unsuitable hand-related strategies. However, IW improved in the latter task after detailed explanations of the condition. In conclusion, we suggest that both participants use visual imagery and visual forward models to control their hand movements. Visual updating of the forward model also improves performance with no vision. In addition, IW seemed to have been able to move from a focus on hand position to one on the transformed visual feedback to improve movement control in the incongruent feedback/movement condition. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) (journal abstract)
Erscheinungsjahr
2007
Zeitschriftentitel
Journal of Neuropsychology
Band
1
Ausgabe
2
Seite(n)
259-282
ISSN
1748-6645
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/1954351

Zitieren

Mechsner F, Stenneken P, Cole J, Aschersleben G, Prinz W. Bimanual circling in deafferented patients: evidence for a role of visual forward models. Journal of Neuropsychology. 2007;1(2):259-282.
Mechsner, F., Stenneken, P., Cole, J., Aschersleben, G., & Prinz, W. (2007). Bimanual circling in deafferented patients: evidence for a role of visual forward models. Journal of Neuropsychology, 1(2), 259-282. https://doi.org/10.1348/174866407X230688
Mechsner, Franz, Stenneken, Prisca, Cole, Jonathan, Aschersleben, Gisa, and Prinz, Wolfgang. 2007. “Bimanual circling in deafferented patients: evidence for a role of visual forward models”. Journal of Neuropsychology 1 (2): 259-282.
Mechsner, F., Stenneken, P., Cole, J., Aschersleben, G., and Prinz, W. (2007). Bimanual circling in deafferented patients: evidence for a role of visual forward models. Journal of Neuropsychology 1, 259-282.
Mechsner, F., et al., 2007. Bimanual circling in deafferented patients: evidence for a role of visual forward models. Journal of Neuropsychology, 1(2), p 259-282.
F. Mechsner, et al., “Bimanual circling in deafferented patients: evidence for a role of visual forward models”, Journal of Neuropsychology, vol. 1, 2007, pp. 259-282.
Mechsner, F., Stenneken, P., Cole, J., Aschersleben, G., Prinz, W.: Bimanual circling in deafferented patients: evidence for a role of visual forward models. Journal of Neuropsychology. 1, 259-282 (2007).
Mechsner, Franz, Stenneken, Prisca, Cole, Jonathan, Aschersleben, Gisa, and Prinz, Wolfgang. “Bimanual circling in deafferented patients: evidence for a role of visual forward models”. Journal of Neuropsychology 1.2 (2007): 259-282.

4 Zitationen in Europe PMC

Daten bereitgestellt von Europe PubMed Central.

A task-dependent effect of memory and hand-target on proprioceptive localization.
Jones SA, Fiehler K, Henriques DY., Neuropsychologia 50(7), 2012
PMID: 22406556
Impossible is nothing: 5:3 and 4:3 multi-frequency bimanual coordination.
Kovacs AJ, Buchanan JJ, Shea CH., Exp Brain Res 201(2), 2010
PMID: 19798488
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