| Literature DB >> 26282829 |
Charles H Shea1, John J Buchanan2, Deanna M Kennedy2.
Abstract
For nearly four decades bimanual coordination, "a prototype of complex motor skills" and apparent "window into the design of the brain," has been intensively studied. Past research has focused on describing and modeling the constraints that allow the production of some coordination patterns while limiting effective performance of other bimanual coordination patterns. More recently researchers have identified a coalition of perception-action constraints that hinder the effective production of bimanual skills. The result has been that given specially designed contexts where one or more of these constraints are minimized, bimanual skills once thought difficult, if not impossible, to effectively produce without very extensive practice can be executed effectively with little or no practice. The challenge is to understand how these contextual constraints interact to allow or inhibit the production of complex bimanual coordination skills. In addition, the factors affecting the stability of bimanual coordination tasks needs to be re-conceptualized in terms of perception-related constraints arising from the environmental context in which performance is conducted and action constraints resident in the neuromotor system.Keywords: Bimanual coordination; Coalition of constraints; Optimized displays; Perception-action dynamics; Polyrhythm
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26282829 DOI: 10.3758/s13423-015-0915-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychon Bull Rev ISSN: 1069-9384