Handbook of Psychology, Volume 4: Experimental Psychology

(Axel Boer) #1
Motor Coordination 339

single-hand dual-hand
same

(a) Lines

dual-hand
different

2.5 cm

2.5 cm

single-hand

(b) Circles

dual-hand
same

dual-hand
different

2.5 cm

2.5 cm

Figure 12.15 (a) Periodic lines drawn with one hand when with the other
nothing was done or lines and circles were drawn concurrently; (b) periodic
circles drawn with one hand when with the other hand nothing was done or
circles and lines were drawn concurrently (after Franz et al., 1991).


Spijkers and Heuer (1995; Heuer, Spijkers, Kleinsorge, &
Steglich, 2000) studied conditions in which one hand had to
produce constant-amplitude oscillations and the other hand
oscillations with alternating short and long amplitudes. They
found that the requirement to change the amplitude in the one
hand produced a contralateral effect in addition to the one ob-
served with constant-amplitude oscillations. Specifically,
after a change from a short to a long amplitude, the amplitude
of the contralateral hand was larger than when only long am-
plitudes were repeated, and after a change from a long to a
short amplitude the amplitude of the contralateral hand was
smaller than when only short amplitudes were repeated.
These findings indicate that cross-manual effects result not
only from concurrent execution of different amplitudes, but
perhaps also from cross-talk between processes of amplitude
specifications. This is also indicated by the observation
that contralateral involuntary amplitude modulations can be


produced not only by movements of alternating short and
long amplitudes, but also by the imagery of such movements
(Heuer, Spijkers, Kleinsorge, & van der Loo, 1998).
Discrete-movement studies give clear evidence of a tight
temporal coupling in that movements of different amplitude
and accuracy requirements tend to be of (almost) the same du-
ration (Kelso et al., 1979; Marteniuk, MacKenzie, & Baba,
1984). However, amplitude assimilation is only weak and
tends to be asymmetrical in that the amplitude of a shorter
movement is increased, while the amplitude of the concurrent
longer movement is only slightly or not at all reduced
(Heuer, Spijkers, Kleinsorge, van der Loo, & Steglich, 1998;
Marteniuk et al., 1984; Sherwood, 1991). The tighter temporal
than spatial coupling is also indicated by the typical finding that
movement durations are more strongly correlated across trials
than movement amplitudes (e.g., Sherwood, 1991).
Structural constraints on coordination are double-faced:
On the one hand, they support the performance of certain
tasks, like the production of strictly symmetric movements of
the upper limbs, and on the other hand they impede the per-
formance of other tasks, like the production of asymmetric
movements. Together with the basically soft nature of struc-
tural constraints, this suggests that their strength might be
modulated depending on task requirements. In particular,
their strength might be enhanced when this is appropriate for
the task at hand, and it might be reduced when this is appro-
priate. Such a task-related modulation of structural con-
straints on coordination does indeed exist.
Sherwood (1991) found higher intermanual correlations
between the amplitudes of discrete rapid reversal movements
when same amplitudes rather than different amplitudes were
required. The same result was reported by Heuer, Spijkers,
Kleinsorge, van der Loo, and Steglich (1998), who in addi-
tion found aftereffects such that the intermanual amplitude
correlation was higher subsequent to same-amplitude move-
ments than following different-amplitude movements, and by
Steglich, Heuer, Spijkers, and Kleinsorge (1999) for peak
forces of isometric contractions with same and different tar-
get forces for the two hands.
Rinkenauer, Ulrich, and Wing (2001) showed for isomet-
ric contractions that the requirement to produce different
peak forces is associated not only with a reduction of the in-
termanual correlation between peak forces, but also with a re-
duction of the intermanual correlation between rise times.
Similarly, when different rise times were to be produced in
another experiment, both the correlations between rise times
and between amplitudes were reduced. These findings indi-
cate that the decoupling, which can be observed when differ-
ent movements or isometric contractions are to be produced
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