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Target-distractor synchrony affects performance in a novel motor task for studying action selection

The study of action selection in humans can present challenges of task design since our actions are usually defined by many degrees of freedom and therefore occupy a large action-space. While saccadic eye-movement offers a more constrained paradigm for investigating action selection, the study of re...

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Autores principales: James, Sebastian, Bell, Olivia A., Nazli, Muhammed A. M., Pearce, Rachel E., Spencer, Jonathan, Tyrrell, Katie, Paine, Phillip J., Heaton, Timothy J., Anderson, Sean, Da Lio, Mauro, Gurney, Kevin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5419578/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28475622
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176945
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author James, Sebastian
Bell, Olivia A.
Nazli, Muhammed A. M.
Pearce, Rachel E.
Spencer, Jonathan
Tyrrell, Katie
Paine, Phillip J.
Heaton, Timothy J.
Anderson, Sean
Da Lio, Mauro
Gurney, Kevin
author_facet James, Sebastian
Bell, Olivia A.
Nazli, Muhammed A. M.
Pearce, Rachel E.
Spencer, Jonathan
Tyrrell, Katie
Paine, Phillip J.
Heaton, Timothy J.
Anderson, Sean
Da Lio, Mauro
Gurney, Kevin
author_sort James, Sebastian
collection PubMed
description The study of action selection in humans can present challenges of task design since our actions are usually defined by many degrees of freedom and therefore occupy a large action-space. While saccadic eye-movement offers a more constrained paradigm for investigating action selection, the study of reach-and-grasp in upper limbs has often been defined by more complex scenarios, not easily interpretable in terms of such selection. Here we present a novel motor behaviour task which addresses this by limiting the action space to a single degree of freedom in which subjects have to track (using a stylus) a vertical coloured target line displayed on a tablet computer, whilst ignoring a similarly oriented distractor line in a different colour. We ran this task with 55 subjects and showed that, in agreement with previous studies, the presence of the distractor generally increases the movement latency and directional error rate. Further, we used two distractor conditions according to whether the distractor’s location changes asynchronously or synchronously with the location of the target. We found that the asynchronous distractor yielded poorer performance than its synchronous counterpart, with significantly higher movement latencies and higher error rates. We interpret these results in an action selection framework with two actions (move left or right) and competing ‘action requests’ offered by the target and distractor. As such, the results provide insights into action selection performance in humans and supply data for directly constraining future computational models therein.
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spelling pubmed-54195782017-05-14 Target-distractor synchrony affects performance in a novel motor task for studying action selection James, Sebastian Bell, Olivia A. Nazli, Muhammed A. M. Pearce, Rachel E. Spencer, Jonathan Tyrrell, Katie Paine, Phillip J. Heaton, Timothy J. Anderson, Sean Da Lio, Mauro Gurney, Kevin PLoS One Research Article The study of action selection in humans can present challenges of task design since our actions are usually defined by many degrees of freedom and therefore occupy a large action-space. While saccadic eye-movement offers a more constrained paradigm for investigating action selection, the study of reach-and-grasp in upper limbs has often been defined by more complex scenarios, not easily interpretable in terms of such selection. Here we present a novel motor behaviour task which addresses this by limiting the action space to a single degree of freedom in which subjects have to track (using a stylus) a vertical coloured target line displayed on a tablet computer, whilst ignoring a similarly oriented distractor line in a different colour. We ran this task with 55 subjects and showed that, in agreement with previous studies, the presence of the distractor generally increases the movement latency and directional error rate. Further, we used two distractor conditions according to whether the distractor’s location changes asynchronously or synchronously with the location of the target. We found that the asynchronous distractor yielded poorer performance than its synchronous counterpart, with significantly higher movement latencies and higher error rates. We interpret these results in an action selection framework with two actions (move left or right) and competing ‘action requests’ offered by the target and distractor. As such, the results provide insights into action selection performance in humans and supply data for directly constraining future computational models therein. Public Library of Science 2017-05-05 /pmc/articles/PMC5419578/ /pubmed/28475622 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176945 Text en © 2017 James et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
James, Sebastian
Bell, Olivia A.
Nazli, Muhammed A. M.
Pearce, Rachel E.
Spencer, Jonathan
Tyrrell, Katie
Paine, Phillip J.
Heaton, Timothy J.
Anderson, Sean
Da Lio, Mauro
Gurney, Kevin
Target-distractor synchrony affects performance in a novel motor task for studying action selection
title Target-distractor synchrony affects performance in a novel motor task for studying action selection
title_full Target-distractor synchrony affects performance in a novel motor task for studying action selection
title_fullStr Target-distractor synchrony affects performance in a novel motor task for studying action selection
title_full_unstemmed Target-distractor synchrony affects performance in a novel motor task for studying action selection
title_short Target-distractor synchrony affects performance in a novel motor task for studying action selection
title_sort target-distractor synchrony affects performance in a novel motor task for studying action selection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5419578/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28475622
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176945
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