| Literature DB >> 31379692 |
Irene Senna1,2, Lucilla Cardinali3, Alessandro Farnè1,4,5,6, Claudio Brozzoli1,4,5,7.
Abstract
Successful interaction with objects in the peripersonal space requires that the information relative to current and upcoming positions of our body is continuously monitored and updated with respect to the location of target objects. Voluntary actions, for example, are known to induce an anticipatory remapping of the peri-hand space (PHS, i.e., the space near the acting hand) during the very early stages of the action chain: planning and initiating an object grasp increase the interference exerted by visual stimuli coming from the object on touches delivered to the grasping hand, thus allowing for hand-object position monitoring and guidance. Voluntarily grasping an object, though, is rarely performed in isolation. Grasping a candy, for example, is most typically followed by concatenated secondary action steps (bringing the candy to the mouth and swallowing it) that represent the agent's ultimate intention (to eat the candy). However, whether and when complex action chains remap the PHS remains unknown, just as whether remapping is conditional to goal achievability (e.g., candy-mouth fit). Here we asked these questions by assessing changes in visuo-tactile interference on the acting hand while participants had to grasp an object serving as a support for an elongated candy, and bring it toward their mouth. Depending on its orientation, the candy could potentially enter the participants' mouth (plausible goal), or not (implausible goal). We observed increased visuo-tactile interference at relatively late stages of the action chain, after the object had been grasped, and only when the action goal was plausible. These findings suggest that multisensory interactions during action execution depend upon the final aim and plausibility of complex goal-directed actions, and extend our knowledge about the role of peripersonal space in guiding goal-directed voluntary actions.Entities:
Keywords: action’s aim; grasping; kinematics; motor act chains; multisensory; naturalistic neuroscience; peripersonal space
Year: 2019 PMID: 31379692 PMCID: PMC6652232 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01681
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Experimental setup and task. Participants sat in front of a target object, which they had to grasp with a precision grip (i.e., with index and thumb) and bring close to the mouth. A candy was fixed on the target object, either oriented horizontally, thus potentially capable of entering the mouth (plausible action) or vertically, in an orientation that would make impossible for the candy to enter the mouth (implausible action). At the same time, they had to discriminate the position (i.e., up or down) of an electro-cutaneous stimulus (gray circles) delivered up (index finger) or down (thumb), while a concurrent task-irrelevant visual distractor (yellow circles) could be displayed on either the same (congruent) or different (incongruent) position from one of two LEDs embedded into the cylinder’s extremities.
Figure 2Modulation of visuo-tactile processing during action execution. Bar plots (with SEM) show the modulation of the cross-modal congruency effect (CCE) as a function of action phase and object orientation. The CCE significantly increased during the Grasping-end phase only when the action was plausible (i.e., when the candy was oriented horizontally).
Absolute reaction times (mean ± standard errors of the mean, in ms) for the different phases of the plausible (horizontal orientation) and implausible (vertical orientation) actions.
| Action phase | Plausible action | Implausible action |
|---|---|---|
| Static | 514 ± 18.6 | 517 ± 21.3 |
| Planning | 541 ± 25.7 | 540 ± 25.5 |
| Execution | 542 ± 25.7 | 526 ± 26.2 |
| Grasping end | 477 ± 27.8 | 479 ± 27.8 |
| Bringing | 476 ± 28.2 | 480 ± 21.2 |
Figure 3Means and standard errors of the parameters of the reaching component differing between plausible and implausible actions. Asterisks denote statistically significant differences between the actions.