Journal article
Visuo-manual tracking: does intermittent control with aperiodic sampling explain linear power and non-linear remnant without sensorimotor noise?
H Gollee, PJ Gawthrop, M Lakie, ID Loram
Journal of Physiology | WILEY | Published : 2017
DOI: 10.1113/JP274288
Open access
Abstract
Key points: A human controlling an external system is described most easily and conventionally as linearly and continuously translating sensory input to motor output, with the inevitable output remnant, non-linearly related to the input, attributed to sensorimotor noise. Recent experiments show sustained manual tracking involves repeated refractoriness (insensitivity to sensory information for a certain duration), with the temporary 200–500 ms periods of irresponsiveness to sensory input making the control process intrinsically non-linear. This evidence calls for re-examination of the extent to which random sensorimotor noise is required to explain the non-linear remnant. This investigation ..
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Awarded by Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
We acknowledge EPSRC financial support for this project via the linked grants EP/F068514/1, EP/F069022/1 and EP/F06974X/1.