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Research Articles

Submovement Organization, Pen Pressure, and Muscle Activity Are Modulated to Precision Demands in 2D Tracking

, , , &
Pages 379-388 | Received 11 Jan 2012, Accepted 03 Sep 2012, Published online: 23 Oct 2012
 

ABSTRACT

The authors investigated how tracking performance, submovement organization, pen pressure and muscle activity in forearm and shoulder muscles were affected by target size in a 2D tracking task performed with a pen on a digitizer tablet. Twenty-six subjects took part in an experiment, in which either a small dot or a large dot was tracked, while it moved quasirandomly across a computer screen at a constant velocity of 2 cm/s. The manipulation of precision level was successful, because mean distance to target and the standard deviation of this distance were significantly smaller with the small target than with the large target. With a small target, subjects trailed more behind the center of target and used submovements with larger amplitudes and of shorter duration, resulting in higher tracking accuracy. This change in submovement organization was accompanied by higher pen pressure, while at the same time muscle activity in the forearm extensors and flexors was increased, indicating higher endpoint stability. In conclusion, increased precision demands were accommodated by both a different organization of submovements and higher endpoint stability in a 2D tracking task performed with a pen on a digitizer tablet.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT

The authors would like to thank Bert Coolen for the technical assistance and programming the tracking task.

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