Psychological Research

, Volume 65, Issue 2, pp 119–127 | Cite as

Frames of reference in perceptual-motor learning: Evidence from a blind manual positioning task

  • David A. Rosenbaum
  • Scott R. Chaiken
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Abstract

Participants moved a joystick to bring a computer-displayed cursor to each of six on-screen target locations arrayed around the center of the screen. At the start of each trial, the stick rested vertically, with a cursor occupying the center of the screen. A target appeared at another location and as soon as the stick was moved away from its rest position the cursor disappeared until the participant pressed a trigger on the stick to indicate when s/he thought the stick-controlled cursor was at the target site. With training, participants improved on the blind positioning task, but when conditions changed their performance suffered. Changing the hand used in the task or the location of the stick caused approximately equal disruptions, but changing both hand and location was significantly more disruptive than changing just one feature. The results support the hypothesis that perceptual-motor learning entails coding of extrinsic (spatial coordinates) as well as intrinsic (postural or body movement) information.

Keywords

Target Site Target Location Body Movement Blind Manual Rest Position 
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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Copyright information

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2001

Authors and Affiliations

  • David A. Rosenbaum
    • 1
  • Scott R. Chaiken
    • 2
  1. 1.Department of Psychology, Penn State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA email: dar12@psu.eduUS
  2. 2.AFRL/HEAI, 2504 Gillingham Drive, Suite 201, Brooks Air Force Base, TX 78235-5100, USA e-mail: scott.chaiken@brooks.af.milUS

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