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Erschienen in: Experimental Brain Research 3/2007

01.03.2007 | Research Article

Lateral ball interception: hand movements during linear ball trajectories

verfasst von: Ryan Arzamarski, Steven J. Harrison, Alen Hajnal, Claire F. Michaels

Erschienen in: Experimental Brain Research | Ausgabe 3/2007

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Abstract

Part of understanding how acts are coordinated is identifying the information that guides movements. In the case of catching a ball within arm’s reach, that identification has been complicated by empirical disparities concerning hand-movement reversals during catching. Jacobs and Michaels (J Exp Psychol Hum 32: 443–458, 2006) found unilateral reversals in a paradigm in which balls swung down in an arc; this implicated a particular optical variable, the ratio of lateral velocity to expansion velocity. Montagne et al. (Exp Brain Res 129:87–92, 1999) reported bilateral reversals when balls approached along a linear trajectory, which implicated a different variable, lateral ball position. The research reported here attempted to replicate Montagne et al.’s (Exp Brain Res 129:87–92, 1999) findings. In Experiment 1, participants caught balls rolling toward them across a table, under full lighting using monocular or binocular viewing; in Experiment 2, participants caught luminous balls with a luminous glove in an otherwise dark room. Using Montagne et al.’s (Exp Brain Res 129:87–92, 1999) criterion, we observed no movement reversals in any condition, though some aspects of hand movements suggested the relevance of lateral ball position. The results of Experiment 3, which asked perceivers to indicate only where rods pointed, suggested that lateral position effects were a bias that is unrelated to interception. The ratio of lateral velocity to expansion appears to be a better variable for explaining hand trajectories in lateral interception.
Fußnoten
1
Another act of interception, hitting, also involves movement reversals, such as in a golf swing, heading a soccer ball, and various laboratory tasks (see, e.g., Caljouw et al. 2005). Our concern is only with catching, in which there is no intention to transfer momentum to the ball.
 
2
We should note that the errors at the leftmost (−30 cm) and rightmost positions (30 cm and 60 cm) reflect that we asked our participants to reach somewhat farther than they could comfortably. Our longer-armed, male pilot participants did not show these under-reaches.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Lateral ball interception: hand movements during linear ball trajectories
verfasst von
Ryan Arzamarski
Steven J. Harrison
Alen Hajnal
Claire F. Michaels
Publikationsdatum
01.03.2007
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Experimental Brain Research / Ausgabe 3/2007
Print ISSN: 0014-4819
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-1106
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-006-0671-8

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