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Touch, Proprioception and Vision

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Sensory information is essential for all theories of motor control and learning ... Fovea centralis. Optic disk. Rods. Cones. Optic nerve (cranial nerve II) [Fig. 6.7] ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Touch, Proprioception and Vision


1
Chapter 6
  • Touch, Proprioception and Vision

Concept Touch, proprioception and vision are
important components of motor control
2
Introduction
  • Sensory information is essential for all theories
    of motor control and learning
  • Provides pre-movement information
  • Provides feedback about the movement in progress
  • Provides post-movement information about action
    goal achievement
  • Focus of current chapter is three types of
    sensory information
  • Touch, vision, and proprioception

3
Touch and Motor Control
  • Describe some ways we use touch to help us
    achieve action goals
  • Neural basis of touch see Fig. 6.1
  • Skin receptors
  • Mechanoreceptors located in the dermis layer of
    skin
  • Greatest concentration in finger tips
  • Provide CNS with temperature, pain, and movement
    info

4
Touch and Motor Control, contd
Roles of Tactile Info in Motor Control
  • Typical research technique
  • Compare performance of task involving finger(s)
    before and after anesthetizing finger(s)
  • Research shows tactile sensory info influences
  • Movement accuracy
  • Movement consistency
  • Movement force adjustments

See an example of research for typing A Closer
Look, p. 109
5
Proprioception and Motor Control
  • Proprioception The sensory systems detection
    and reception of movement and spatial position of
    limbs, trunk, and head
  • We will use the term synonymously with the term
    kinesthesis

6
Neural Basis of Proprioception
  • CNS receives proprioception information from
    sensory neural pathways that begin in specialized
    sensory neurons known as proprioceptors
  • Located in muscles, tendons, ligaments, and
    joints
  • Three primary types of proprioceptors
  • Muscle spindles
  • Golgi tendon organs
  • Joint receptors

7
Neural Basis of Proprioception Proprioceptors
  • 1. Muscle spindles
  • In most skeletal muscles in a capsule of
    specialized muscle fibers and sensory neurons
  • Intrafusal fibers see Fig. 6.2
  • Lie in parallel with extrafusal muscle fibers
  • Mechanoreceptors that detect changes in muscle
    fiber length (i.e. stretch) and velocity (i.e.
    speed of stretch)
  • Enables detection of changes in joint angle
  • Function as a feedback mechanism to CNS to
    maintain intended limb movement position,
    direction, and velocity

8
Neural Basis of Proprioception Proprioceptors,
contd
  • 2. Golgi-Tendon Organs (GTO)
  • In skeletal muscle near insertion of tendon
  • Detect changes in muscle tension (i.e. force)
  • Poor detectors of muscle length changes
  • 3. Joint Receptors
  • Several types located in joint capsule and
    ligaments
  • Mechanoreceptors that detect changes in
  • Force and rotation applied to the joint,
  • Joint movement angle, especially at the extreme
    limits of angular movement or joint positions

9
Techniques to Investigate the Role of
Propioception in Motor Control
  • Deafferentation techniques
  • Surgical deafferentation
  • Afferent neutral pathways associated with
    movements of interest have been surgically
    removed or altered
  • Deafferentation due to sensory neuropathy
  • Sometimes called peripheral neuropathy
  • Large myelinated fibers of the limb are lost,
    leading to a loss of all sensory information
    except pain and temperature
  • Temporary deafferentation
  • Nerve block technique Inflate blood-pressure
    cuff to create temporary disuse of sensory nerves

10
Techniques to Investigate the Role of
Propioception in Motor Control, contd
  • Tendon vibration technique
  • Involves high speed vibration of the tendon of
    the agonist muscle
  • Proprioceptive feedback is distorted rather than
    removed

11
Role of Proprioceptive Feedback in Motor Control
  • Research using the deafferentation and tendon
    vibration techniques has demonstrated that
    proprioception influences
  • Movement accuracy
  • Target accuracy
  • Spatial and temporal accuracy for movement in
    progress
  • Timing of onset of motor commands
  • Coordination of body and/or limb segments
  • Postural control
  • Spatial-temporal coupling between limbs and limb
    segments
  • Adapting to new situations requiring
    non-preferred movement coordination patterns

12
Vision and Motor Control
  • Vision is our preferred source of sensory
    information
  • Evidence from everyday experiences
  • Beginning typists look at their fingers
  • Beginning dancers look at their feet
  • Evidence from research
  • The classic moving room experiment

13
The Moving Room Experiment
  • Lee Aronson (1974)
  • Participants stood in a room in which the walls
    moved toward or away from them but floor did not
    move
  • Situation created a conflict between which two
    sensory systems?
  • Vision proprioception
  • Results
  • When the walls moved, people adjusted their
    posture to not fall, even though they werent
    moving off balance
  • WHY?

14
Neurophysiology of Vision
  • Basic Anatomy of the Eye
  • See Figure 6.6 for the following anatomical
    components
  • Cornea
  • Iris
  • Lens
  • Sclera
  • Aqueous humor
  • Vitreous humor

15
Neurophysiology of Vision, contd
  • Neural Components of the Eye and Vision
  • Retina see Fig. 6.6
  • Fovea centralis
  • Optic disk
  • Rods
  • Cones
  • Optic nerve (cranial nerve II) Fig. 6.7
  • From the retina to the brains visual cortex

16
Techniques for Invesigating the Role of Vision in
Motor Control
  • Eye movment recording
  • Tracks foveal visions point of gaze
  • i.e. what the person is looking at
  • Temporal occlusion techniques
  • Stop video or film at various times
  • Spectacles with liquid crystal lenses
  • Event occlusion technique
  • Mask view on video or film of specific events or
    characteristics

17
Role of Vision in Motor Control
  • Evidence comes from research investigating
    specific issues and vision characteristics
  • 1. Monocular vs. Binocular Vision
  • Binocular vision important for depth-perception
    when 3-dimensional features involved in
    performance situation, e.g.
  • Reaching grasping objects
  • Walking on a cluttered pathway
  • Intercepting a moving object

18
Role of Vision in Motor Control, contd.
  • 2. Central and Peripheral Vision
  • Central vision
  • Sometimes called foveal vision
  • Middle 2-5 deg. of visual field
  • Provides specific information to allow us to
    achieve action goals, e.g.
  • For reaching and grasping an object specific
    characteristic info, e.g. size, shape, required
    to prepare, move, and grasp object
  • For walking on a pathway specific pathway info
    needed to stay on the pathway

19
Role of Vision in Motor Control, contd.
  • 2. Central and Peripheral Vision, contd.
  • Peripheral vision
  • Detects info beyond the central vision limits
  • Upper limit typically 200 deg.
  • Provides info about the environmental context and
    the moving limb(s)
  • When we move through an environment, peripheral
    vision detects info by assessing optical flow
    patterns
  • Optical flow rays of light that strike the
    retina

20
Role of Vision in Motor Control, contd.
  • 2. Central and Peripheral Vision, contd
  • Two visual systems
  • Vision for perception (central vision)
  • Anatomically referred to as the ventral stream
    from visual cortex to temporal lobe
  • For fine analysis of a scene, e.g. form, features
  • Typically available to consciousness
  • Vision for action (peripheral vision)
  • Anatomically referred to as the dorsal stream
    from visual cortex to posterior parietal lobe
  • For detecting spatial characteristics of a scene
    and guiding movement
  • Typically not available to consciousness

21
Role of Vision in Motor Control, contd.
  • 3. Perception Action Coupling
  • As discussed in ch. 5, refers to the coupling
    (i.e. linking together) of a perceptual event and
    an action
  • Example of research evidence
  • See experiments by Helsen et al. (1998 2000)
    described in textbook (pp.127 128)
  • Results show that spatial and temporal
    characteristics of limb movements occurred
    together with specific spatial and temporal
    characteristics of eye movements

22
Role of Vision in Motor Control, contd.
  • 4. Amount of Time Needed for Movement
    Corrections?
  • Concerns visions feedback role during movement
  • Researchers have tried to answer this question
    since original work by Woodworth in 1899
  • Typical procedure Compare accuracy of rapid
    manual aiming movements of various MTs with
    target visible and then not visible just after
    movement begins
  • Expect accurate movement with lights off when no
    visual feedback needed during movement
  • Currently, best estimate is a range of 100 160
    msec. (The typical range for simple RT to a
    visual signal)

23
Role of Vision in Motor Control, contd.
  • 5. Time-to-Contact The Optical Variable tau
  • Concerns situations in which
  • Object moving to person must be intercept
  • Person moving toward object needs to contact or
    avoid contact with object
  • Vision provides info about time-to-contact object
    which motor control system uses to initiate
    movement
  • Automatic, non-conscious specification based on
    changing size of object on retina
  • At critical size, requisite movement initiated
  • David Lee (1974) showed the time-to-contact info
    specified by an optical variable (tau), which
    could be mathematically quantified
  • Motor control benefit Automatic movement
    initiation
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