Behavioral/Systems/Cognitive Visuomotor Coordination Is Different for Different Directions in Three-Dimensional Space

Abstract

In most visuomotor tasks in which subjects have to reach to visual targets or move the hand along a particular trajectory, eye movements have been shown to lead hand movements. Because the dynamics of vergence eye movements is different from that of smooth pursuit and saccades, we have investigated the lead time of gaze relative to the hand for the depth component (vergence) and in the frontal plane (smooth pursuit and saccades) in a tracking task and in a tracing task in which human subjects were instructed to move the finger along a 3D path. For tracking, gaze leads finger position on average by 28 � 6 ms (mean � SE) for the components in the frontal plane but lags finger position by 95 � 39 ms for the depth dimension. For tracing, gaze leads finger position by 151 � 36 ms for the depth dimension. For the frontal plane, the mean lead time of gaze relative to the hand is 287 � 13 ms. However, we found that the lead time in the frontal plane was inversely related to the tangential velocity of finger. This inverse relation for movements in the frontal plane could be explained by assuming that gaze leads the finger by a constant distance of �2.6 cm (range of 1.5–3.6 cm across subjects)

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