Are Sub-Movements Induced Visually in Discrete Aiming Tasks?

J Mot Behav. 2022;54(2):173-185. doi: 10.1080/00222895.2021.1937031. Epub 2021 Jun 17.

Abstract

There is a long-held view that discrete movements aimed to a target are composed of a sequence of movement units (sub-movements) that have different roles in motor control (e.g., initial impulse, error correction and movement termination) depending on the task constraints (e.g., spatial-temporal requirements). Here we report findings from the manipulation of vision/no-vision on the prevalence and type of sub-movements in discrete movement tasks over a range of space-time task criteria. The presence of vison resulted in longer movement times compared to the no-vision counterpart in time-matching tasks. A similar vision effect was observed in the highest Index of Difficulty for time-minimization tasks. Conditions that resulted/required longer movement times demonstrated more pre-velocity-peak and post-velocity-peak types of sub-movements whereas short movement times increased the likelihood of overshooting sub-movements. The present study results are consistent with the idea that movement time is the variable associated with changes in sub-movement profiles.

Keywords: Fitts law; feedback; goal directed task; motor control; space-time constraint; visual corrections.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Movement*
  • Psychomotor Performance*