Eye movements during motor imagery and execution reveal different visuomotor control strategies in manual interception
D'Aquino A, Frank C, Hagan Junior JE, Schack T (2023)
Psychophysiology 60(12): 1-16.
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
| Veröffentlicht | Englisch
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Abstract / Bemerkung
Previous research has investigated the degree of congruency in gaze metrics between action execution (AE) and motor imagery (MI) for similar manual tasks. Although eye movement dynamics seem to be limited to relatively simple actions toward static objects, there is little evidence of how gaze parameters change during imagery as a function of more dynamic spatial and temporal task demands. This study examined the similarities and differences in eye movements during AE and MI for an interception task. Twenty-four students were asked to either mentally simulate or physically intercept a moving target on a computer display. Smooth pursuit, saccades, and response time were compared between the two conditions. The results show that MI was characterized by higher smooth pursuit gain and duration while no meaningful differences were found in the other parameters. The findings indicate that eye movements during imagery are not simply a duplicate of what happens during actual performance. Instead, eye movements appear to vary as a function of the interaction between visuomotor control strategies and task demands.
Erscheinungsjahr
2023
Zeitschriftentitel
Psychophysiology
Band
60
Ausgabe
12
Seite(n)
1-16
Urheberrecht / Lizenzen
ISSN
0048-5772
eISSN
1469-8986
Finanzierungs-Informationen
Open-Access-Publikationskosten wurden durch die Universität Bielefeld im Rahmen des DEAL-Vertrags gefördert.
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https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2981290
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D'Aquino A, Frank C, Hagan Junior JE, Schack T. Eye movements during motor imagery and execution reveal different visuomotor control strategies in manual interception. Psychophysiology. 2023;60(12):1-16.
D'Aquino, A., Frank, C., Hagan Junior, J. E., & Schack, T. (2023). Eye movements during motor imagery and execution reveal different visuomotor control strategies in manual interception. Psychophysiology, 60(12), 1-16. https://doi.org/10.1111/psyp.14401
D'Aquino, Alessio, Frank, Cornelia, Hagan Junior, John Elvis, and Schack, Thomas. 2023. “Eye movements during motor imagery and execution reveal different visuomotor control strategies in manual interception”. Psychophysiology 60 (12): 1-16.
D'Aquino, A., Frank, C., Hagan Junior, J. E., and Schack, T. (2023). Eye movements during motor imagery and execution reveal different visuomotor control strategies in manual interception. Psychophysiology 60, 1-16.
D'Aquino, A., et al., 2023. Eye movements during motor imagery and execution reveal different visuomotor control strategies in manual interception. Psychophysiology, 60(12), p 1-16.
A. D'Aquino, et al., “Eye movements during motor imagery and execution reveal different visuomotor control strategies in manual interception”, Psychophysiology, vol. 60, 2023, pp. 1-16.
D'Aquino, A., Frank, C., Hagan Junior, J.E., Schack, T.: Eye movements during motor imagery and execution reveal different visuomotor control strategies in manual interception. Psychophysiology. 60, 1-16 (2023).
D'Aquino, Alessio, Frank, Cornelia, Hagan Junior, John Elvis, and Schack, Thomas. “Eye movements during motor imagery and execution reveal different visuomotor control strategies in manual interception”. Psychophysiology 60.12 (2023): 1-16.
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2023-07-31T06:10:14Z
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