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Research Articles

Directional Adaptation of Reactive Saccades and Hand Pointing Movements Is Not Independent

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Pages 101-106 | Received 24 Aug 2012, Accepted 14 Nov 2012, Published online: 26 Feb 2013
 

ABSTRACT

It is a matter of debate whether reactive saccades and hand pointing movements share common adaptive mechanism. To find out, the authors used a double-step paradigm in which the direction either of eye or of hand movements was adaptively modified in a first block of 300 trials, and the direction of the other motor system was then modified with opposite polarity in a second block of 300 trials. In a third block, single-step stimuli were used to test for after effects. The authors found that subjects adapted in the second block less well than in the first, and that aftereffects were adequate for the first rather than the second block. When the second block was extended to 500 trials, adaptation was still poor but aftereffects were now adequate for the second block. From this the authors concluded that double-step adaptation of the first motor system interferes with the subsequent adaptation of the other motor system (i.e., the adaptive mechanisms for eyes and hand are not independent).

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was supported by DFG and the Bulgarian Academy of Science (Exchange Grant BUL113/148/0-1). Thanks are due to Dipl.-Ing. P. Grozdev for software development.

Notes

1. We decided for a constant rather than a saccade-triggered interstep interval in order to keep the paradigm similar for eyes and hand, and comparable to our previous work (Bock et al., Citation2008; Schmitz et al., Citation2010). We have recently shown that saccadic direction adapts equally well and shows comparable aftereffects, with constant and with saccade-triggered intervals (Grigorova et al., Citation2010).

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