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Grasping the past: delay can improve visuomotor performance

Milner, A.D.; Dijkerman, H.C.; Pisella, L.; McIntosh, R.D.; Tilikete, C.; Vighetto, A.; Rossetti, Y.

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Authors

A.D. Milner

H.C. Dijkerman

L. Pisella

R.D. McIntosh

C. Tilikete

A. Vighetto

Y. Rossetti



Abstract

“Optic ataxia” is caused by damage to the human posterior parietal cortex (PPC). It disrupts all components of a visually guided prehension movement, not only the transport of the hand toward an object's location [1], but also the in-flight finger movements pretailored to the metric properties of the object [2, 3 and 4]. Like previous cases [4 and 5], our patient (I.G.) was quite unable to open her handgrip appropriately when directly reaching out to pick up objects of different sizes. When first tested, she failed to do this even when she had previewed the target object 5 s earlier. Yet despite this deficit in “real” grasping, we found, counterintuitively, that I.G. showed good grip scaling when “pantomiming” a grasp for an object seen earlier but no longer present. We then found that, after practice, I.G. became able to scale her handgrip when grasping a real target object that she had previewed earlier. By interposing catch trials in which a different object was covertly substituted for the original object during the delay between preview and grasp, we found that I.G. was now using memorized visual information to calibrate her real grasping movements. These results provide new evidence that “off-line” visuomotor guidance can be provided by networks independent of the PPC.

Citation

Milner, A., Dijkerman, H., Pisella, L., McIntosh, R., Tilikete, C., Vighetto, A., & Rossetti, Y. (2001). Grasping the past: delay can improve visuomotor performance. Current Biology, 11(23), 1896-1901. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0960-9822%2801%2900591-7

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date 2001-11
Deposit Date Feb 26, 2009
Publicly Available Date Feb 26, 2009
Journal Current Biology
Print ISSN 0960-9822
Publisher Cell Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 11
Issue 23
Pages 1896-1901
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/s0960-9822%2801%2900591-7

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