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A comparison of visuomotor cue integration strategies for object placement and prehension

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2009

HAL S. GREENWALD*
Affiliation:
Center for Visual Science, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York
DAVID C. KNILL
Affiliation:
Center for Visual Science, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York
*
*Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Hal Greenwald, Center for Visual Science, University of Rochester, 274 Meliora Hall, Box 270270, Rochester, NY 14627-0270. E-mail: hgreenwald@bcs.rochester.edu

Abstract

Visual cue integration strategies are known to depend on cue reliability and how rapidly the visual system processes incoming information. We investigated whether these strategies also depend on differences in the information demands for different natural tasks. Using two common goal-oriented tasks, prehension and object placement, we determined whether monocular and binocular information influence estimates of three-dimensional (3D) orientation differently depending on task demands. Both tasks rely on accurate 3D orientation estimates, but 3D position is potentially more important for grasping. Subjects placed an object on or picked up a disc in a virtual environment. On some trials, the monocular cues (aspect ratio and texture compression) and binocular cues (e.g., binocular disparity) suggested slightly different 3D orientations for the disc; these conflicts either were present upon initial stimulus presentation or were introduced after movement initiation, which allowed us to quantify how information from the cues accumulated over time. We analyzed the time-varying orientations of subjects’ fingers in the grasping task and those of the object in the object placement task to quantify how different visual cues influenced motor control. In the first experiment, different subjects performed each task, and those performing the grasping task relied on binocular information more when orienting their hands than those performing the object placement task. When subjects in the second experiment performed both tasks in interleaved sessions, binocular cues were still more influential during grasping than object placement, and the different cue integration strategies observed for each task in isolation were maintained. In both experiments, the temporal analyses showed that subjects processed binocular information faster than monocular information, but task demands did not affect the time course of cue processing. How one uses visual cues for motor control depends on the task being performed, although how quickly the information is processed appears to be task invariant.

Type
Natural Tasks
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2009

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