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Distinct ways of timing movements in bimanual coordination tasks: Contribution of serial correlation analysis and implications for modeling

Authors :
Kjerstin Torre
Didier Delignières
Source :
Acta Psychologica. 129:284-296
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2008.

Abstract

Bimanual coordination dynamics have been conceived as the outcome of a global coordinative system, and coordination stability properties and theories of underlying processes have often been generalized over various bimanual tasks. In unimanual timing tasks it has been shown that different timing processes are involved according to tasks, yielding distinctive correlation properties in the within-hand temporal patterns. In this study we compare unimanual with bimanual, tapping with oscillation, and self-paced with externally paced tasks, and we analyze the correlation properties of temporal patterns at both the component level and the coordinative level. Results show that the distinctive signatures of event-based versus emergent, and self-paced versus synchronization timing control known from unimanual tasks persist in the corresponding bimanual coordination tasks. Accordingly, we argue that these different timing processes, and related temporal patterns at the component level, constitute a task-dependent background on which coordination builds. One direct implication of these results is that the bimanual coordination paradigm should be considered multifaceted and not governed by some unitary generic principle. We discuss the need to assess the relationship between temporal patterns at the component level and the collective level, and to integrate serial (long-range) correlation properties into bimanual coordination models. Finally, we test whether the architectures of current bimanual coordination models can account for the experimentally observed serial correlations.

Details

ISSN :
00016918
Volume :
129
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta Psychologica
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....79d512d2f57f96913d3256be0fa89330
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2008.08.003