Short-term effects of visuomotor discrepancies on multisensory integration, proprioceptive recalibration, and motor adaptation

被引:3
|
作者
Debats, Nienke B. [1 ]
Heuer, Herbert [1 ,2 ]
Kayser, Christoph [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bielefeld, Dept Cognit Neurosci, Bielefeld, Germany
[2] Leibniz Res Ctr Working Environm & Human Factors, Dortmund, Germany
关键词
aftereffect; crossmodal; generalization; hand movement; SENSORIMOTOR ADAPTATION; REACH ADAPTATION; BAYESIAN INTEGRATION; EXPLICIT ADJUSTMENTS; HAND POSITION; IMPLICIT; CALIBRATION; PREDICTION; ROTATIONS; TUTORIAL;
D O I
10.1152/jn.00478.2022
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Information about the position of our hand is provided by multisensory signals that are often not perfectly aligned. Discrepancies between the seen and felt hand position or its movement trajectory engage the processes of 1) multisensory integration, 2) sen-sory recalibration, and 3) motor adaptation, which adjust perception and behavioral responses to apparently discrepant signals. To foster our understanding of the coemergence of these three processes, we probed their short-term dependence on multisen-sory discrepancies in a visuomotor task that has served as a model for multisensory perception and motor control previously. We found that the well-established integration of discrepant visual and proprioceptive signals is tied to the immediate discrep-ancy and independent of the outcome of the integration of discrepant signals in immediately preceding trials. However, the strength of integration was context dependent, being stronger in an experiment featuring stimuli that covered a smaller range of visuomotor discrepancies (+/- 15 degrees) compared with one covering a larger range (+/- 30 degrees). Both sensory recalibration and motor adapta-tion for nonrepeated movement directions were absent after two bimodal trials with same or opposite visuomotor discrepancies. Hence our results suggest that short-term sensory recalibration and motor adaptation are not an obligatory consequence of the integration of preceding discrepant multisensory signals.
引用
收藏
页码:465 / 478
页数:14
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