The role of explicit knowledge in compensating for a visuo-proprioceptive cue conflict.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q4 NEUROSCIENCES
Experimental Brain Research Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-23 DOI:10.1007/s00221-024-06898-5
Anna Hsiao, Hannah J Block
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

It is unclear how explicit knowledge of an externally imposed mismatch between visual and proprioceptive cues of hand position affects perceptual recalibration. The Bayesian causal inference framework might suggest such knowledge should abolish the visual and proprioceptive recalibration that occurs when individuals perceive these cues as coming from the same source (their hand), while the visuomotor adaptation literature suggests explicit knowledge of a cue conflict does not eliminate implicit compensatory processes. Here we compared visual and proprioceptive recalibration in three groups with varying levels of knowledge about the visuo-proprioceptive cue conflict. All participants estimated the position of visual, proprioceptive, or combined targets related to their left index fingertip, with a 70 mm visuo-proprioceptive offset gradually imposed. Groups 1, 2, and 3 received no information, medium information, and high information, respectively, about the offset. Information was manipulated using instructional and visual cues. All groups performed the task similarly at baseline in terms of variance, weighting, and integration. Results suggest the three groups recalibrated vision and proprioception differently, but there was no difference in variance or weighting. Participants who received only instructional cues about the mismatch (Group 2) did not recalibrate less, on average, than participants provided no information about the mismatch (Group 1). However, participants provided instructional cues and extra visual cues of their hands during the perturbation (Group 3) demonstrated significantly less recalibration than other groups. These findings are consistent with the idea that instructional cues alone are insufficient to override participants' intrinsic belief in common cause and reduce recalibration.

Abstract Image

显性知识在补偿视觉-直觉线索冲突中的作用。
目前还不清楚外部施加的手部位置视觉和本体感觉线索不匹配的明确知识如何影响知觉重新校准。贝叶斯因果推理框架可能表明,当个体认为这些线索来自同一来源(他们的手)时,这种知识应该会取消视觉和本体感觉的重新校准,而视觉运动适应文献表明,对线索冲突的明确知识并不会消除隐含的补偿过程。在这里,我们比较了三组对视觉-本体感觉线索冲突有不同程度了解的人的视觉和本体感觉重新校准情况。所有参与者都估算与左手食指指尖相关的视觉、本体感觉或组合目标的位置,并逐渐施加 70 毫米的视觉-本体感觉偏移。第一组、第二组和第三组分别未获得偏移信息、中等信息和高信息。信息是通过指令和视觉线索来操控的。在基线时,所有组别在方差、加权和整合方面的任务完成情况相似。结果表明,三组对视觉和本体感觉的重新校准不同,但在方差或加权方面没有差异。与未获得错配信息的参与者(第 1 组)相比,仅获得错配信息提示的参与者(第 2 组)平均重新校准的程度并不低。然而,在扰动过程中提供了指令提示和额外的手部视觉提示的参与者(第 3 组),其重新校准的次数明显少于其他组别。这些发现与以下观点是一致的:仅凭教学提示不足以推翻参与者对共同原因的内在信念,也不足以减少重新校准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
5.00%
发文量
228
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Founded in 1966, Experimental Brain Research publishes original contributions on many aspects of experimental research of the central and peripheral nervous system. The focus is on molecular, physiology, behavior, neurochemistry, developmental, cellular and molecular neurobiology, and experimental pathology relevant to general problems of cerebral function. The journal publishes original papers, reviews, and mini-reviews.
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