Speed and Sequential Effects in Reaching

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Abstract

To investigate the impact of future task demands on reaching, participants performed repetitive sagittal-plane reaches at low and high speeds. In a control condition, they reached from a start location to a target and back. In the experimental conditions, they reached from the start to the target, then to a second target (the location of which varied between trials), then back to the first target, and finally back to the start. Contributions of the hip, shoulder, and elbow to reaches made to the first target depended on the second target's location, on movement speed, and on repetition. Participants combined sustained and transient postural adjustments to minimize effort. The results support the knowledge model of movement selection (D. A. Rosenbaum, L. D. Loukopoulos, R. G. M. Meulenbroek, J. Vaughan, & S. E. Engelbrecht, 1995) but also call for its elaboration. Variants of the model are explored through simulations of the above study.

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Fischer, M. H., Rosenbaum, D. A., & Vaughan, J. (1997). Speed and Sequential Effects in Reaching. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 23(2), 404–428. https://doi.org/10.1037/0096-1523.23.2.404

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