Literature DB >> 12678604

Driving in the future: temporal visuomotor adaptation and generalization.

D W Cunningham1, A Chatziastros, M von der Heyde, H H Bülthoff.   

Abstract

Rapid and accurate visuomotor coordination requires tight spatial and temporal sensorimotor synchronization. The introduction of a sensorimotor or intersensory misalignment (either spatial or temporal) impairs performance on most tasks. For more than a century, it has been known that a few minutes of exposure to a spatial misalignment can induce a recalibration of sensorimotor spatial relationships, a phenomenon that may be referred to as spatial visuomotor adaptation. Here, we use a high-fidelity driving simulator to demonstrate that the sensorimotor system can adapt to temporal misalignments on very complex tasks, a phenomenon that we refer to as temporal visuomotor adaptation. We demonstrate that adapting on a single street produces an adaptive state that generalizes to other streets. This shows that temporal visuomotor adaptation is not specific to a single visuomotor transformation, but generalizes across a class of transformations. Temporal visuomotor adaptation is strikingly parallel to spatial visuomotor adaptation, and has strong implications for the understanding of visuomotor coordination and intersensory integration.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 12678604     DOI: 10.1167/1.2.3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vis        ISSN: 1534-7362            Impact factor:   2.240


  13 in total

1.  Adaptation to visual feedback delays in manual tracking: evidence against the Smith Predictor model of human visually guided action.

Authors:  R C Miall; J K Jackson
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2006-01-20       Impact factor: 1.972

2.  The effect of exposure to asynchronous audio, visual, and tactile stimulus combinations on the perception of simultaneity.

Authors:  Vanessa Harrar; Laurence R Harris
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2008-01-09       Impact factor: 1.972

3.  Adaptation to visual feedback delays on touchscreens with hand vision.

Authors:  Elie Cattan; Pascal Perrier; François Bérard; Silvain Gerber; Amélie Rochet-Capellan
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2018-09-06       Impact factor: 1.972

4.  The sense of agency is action-effect causality perception based on cross-modal grouping.

Authors:  Takahiro Kawabe; Warrick Roseboom; Shin'ya Nishida
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2013-06-05       Impact factor: 5.349

5.  State-Based Delay Representation and Its Transfer from a Game of Pong to Reaching and Tracking.

Authors:  Guy Avraham; Raz Leib; Assaf Pressman; Lucia S Simo; Amir Karniel; Lior Shmuelof; Ferdinando A Mussa-Ivaldi; Ilana Nisky
Journal:  eNeuro       Date:  2017-12-26

6.  Adaptation to delayed force perturbations in reaching movements.

Authors:  Noa Levy; Assaf Pressman; Ferdinando A Mussa-Ivaldi; Amir Karniel
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-08-11       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Action can amplify motion-induced illusory displacement.

Authors:  Franck Caniard; Heinrich H Bülthoff; Ian M Thornton
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2015-01-13       Impact factor: 3.169

8.  Internal representations of temporal statistics and feedback calibrate motor-sensory interval timing.

Authors:  Luigi Acerbi; Daniel M Wolpert; Sethu Vijayakumar
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2012-11-29       Impact factor: 4.475

9.  'Robot' Hand Illusion under Delayed Visual Feedback: Relationship between the Senses of Ownership and Agency.

Authors:  Mohamad Arif Fahmi Ismail; Sotaro Shimada
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-07-25       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Effects of prolonged exposure to feedback delay on the qualitative subjective experience of virtual reality.

Authors:  Loes C J van Dam; Joey R Stephens
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-10-24       Impact factor: 3.240

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