Perception and action are tightly coupled, and previous studies have demonstrated that action experience can improve perceptual judgment. We investigated whether this improvement in perceptual judgment could be attributed to knowledge regarding movement variability being gained during action experience. Fifteen adults made perceptual judgments regarding the passability of a series of aperture sizes. These judgments were made both before and after walking through the same set of apertures (action experience). When considering the group as a whole, perceptual judgment did not change after action experience. However, when splitting the group into those with low and high preaction perceptual judgments, only those with low perceptual judgments showed an improvement in perceptual judgment following action experience, which could be explained in part by movement variability during the approach. These data demonstrate that action informs perception and that this allows adults to account for movement variability when making perceptual judgments regarding action capabilities.
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The Role of Movement Variability and Action Experience in the Perceptual Judgment of Passability
Wenchong Du, Anna Barnett, and Kate Wilmut
To Drop or Not to Drop: Newly Standing Infants Maintain Hold of Objects When Experiencing a Loss of Balance
Amanda J. Arnold and Laura J. Claxton
If adults are carrying an object and start to experience a loss of balance, they frequently maintain hold of that object instead of dropping it. In these loss-of-balance situations, adults tend to maintain hold of the object, instead of freeing both hands to aid in balance recovery. The current study investigated the ontogeny of this behavior by examining if infants also maintain hold of objects when experiencing a fall. Sixteen newly standing infants were video-recorded while standing and holding a toy and standing while not holding a toy. Similar to adults, when infants experienced a loss of balance, they did not drop held objects. However, maintaining hold of objects only partially interfered with the use of upper-limb protective strategies while falling. These results suggest that the tendency to maintain hold of an object while falling is present early in development and with little independent standing experience.
Crawling Experience Relates to Postural and Emotional Reactions to Optic Flow in a Virtual Moving Room
Moeko Ueno, Ichiro Uchiyama, Joseph J. Campos, David I. Anderson, Minxuan He, and Audun Dahl
Infants show a dramatic shift in postural and emotional responsiveness to peripheral lamellar optic flow (PLOF) following crawling onset. The present study used a novel virtual moving room to assess postural compensation of the shoulders backward and upward and heart rate acceleration to PLOF specifying a sudden horizontal forward translation and a sudden descent down a steep slope in an infinitely long virtual tunnel. No motion control conditions were also included. Participants were 53 8.5-month-old infants: 25 prelocomotors and 28 hands-and-knees crawlers. The primary findings were that crawling infants showed directionally appropriate postural compensation in the two tunnel motion conditions, whereas prelocomotor infants were minimally responsive in both conditions. Similarly, prelocomotor infants showed nonsignificant changes in heart rate acceleration in the tunnel motion conditions, whereas crawling infants showed significantly higher heart rate acceleration in the descent condition than in the descent control condition, and in the descent condition than in the horizontal translation condition. These findings highlight the important role played by locomotor experience in the development of the visual control of posture and in emotional reactions to a sudden optically specified drop. The virtual moving room is a promising paradigm for exploring the development of perception–action coupling.
#DCD/Dyspraxia in Real Life: Twitter Users’ Unprompted Expression of Experiences With Motor Differences
Priscila M. Tamplain, Nicholas E. Fears, Promise Robinson, Riya Chatterjee, Gavin Lichtenberg, and Haylie L. Miller
today, with 100 million daily active users and 500 million tweets sent daily ( Forsey, 2019 ). Here, we used Twitter to explore the experiences of adolescents and adults who identify as members of the DCD/dyspraxia community. Twitter allows individuals to publicly share their thoughts with a large
How Visual and Motor Experience Shapes the Development of Infants’ Perception of Actions Performed by Social Partners
Gustaf Gredebäck
This review focuses on three different processes: action priming, action prediction, and outcome evaluation. Together, these processes form a foundation for social perception early in life. Priming and prediction is argued to be separable processes with different degrees of plasticity, based in part on unique neural structures. These two future-oriented processes are assumed to operate in a sequential manner. A third set of processes, outcome evaluations, follows the completion of observed events and compare the actual events with the assumptions postulated by the preceding future-oriented processes. Together, these processes are argued to provide good grounds for learning via internal models that detect error signals that arise from the potential mismatch between priming and prediction and actual events as they unfold in the external world and use this information to update the accuracy of future-oriented processes.
Lower Quarter Y-Balance Test Anterior Reach Asymmetry and Noncontact Lower Limb Injury in Subelite Young Male Soccer Players With Different Training Experiences
Dirk Krombholz, Peter Leinen, Thomas Muehlbauer, and Stefan Panzer
accompanying symptom for an increased risk to sustain injuries to the lower extremities ( Muehlbauer et al., 2019 ). Paillard ( 2017 ) proposed that movements in a specific field and years of training experience in a specific field ( Ericsson et al., 1993 ; Paillard, 2019 ) are undeniably linked. For soccer
Encouragement is Nothing Without Control: Factors Influencing the Development of Reaching and Face Preference
Klaus Libertus and Amy Needham
Four parent-guided training procedures aimed at facilitating independent reaching were compared in 36 three-month-old infants recruited for this study and 36 infants taken from previously published reports. Training procedures systematically varied whether parental encouragement to act on external objects was provided, and whether self-produced experiences of moving an object were present. Reaching behavior was assessed before and after training, and face preference was measured after training by recording infants’ eye gaze in a visual-preference task. Results showed that simultaneous experiences of parental encouragement and self-produced object motion encouraged successful reaching and face preference. Neither experience in isolation was effective, indicating that both external encouragement and self-produced action experiences are necessary to facilitate successful reaching. However, experiences with self-produced object motion increased infants’ face preference. This result provides evidence for a developmental link between self-produced motor experiences and the emergence of face preference in three-month-old infants.
Social Media as a Tool for Understanding the Role of Motor Differences in Neurodivergent Identity and Lived Experience
Haylie L. Miller
Researchers have long known that motor differences (i.e., motor features that may or may not cause problems or disability) in neurodivergent 1 individuals persist into adulthood, but their effect on adults’ daily living experiences has not been adequately characterized. The initial idea for the
Bimanual Coordination Development Is Enhanced in Young Females and Experienced Athletes
David Albines, Joshua A. Granek, Diana J. Gorbet, and Lauren E. Sergio
We characterize bimanual coordination development for the first time in a large sample of children (n = 303) in relation to age, sex, and athletic experience. A further aim is to document the effect of these factors on development to indirectly gain insight into the neural processes that underlie this advanced level of eye–hand coordination. This was a cross-sectional design involving three age groups (range: 9–15 years) that were further separated by sex and level of athletic experience. Participants completed two bimanual tasks and a unimanual control task. While there was no significant change in unimanual movement speed, we observed that females performed the bimanual tasks faster, compared with males. Further, we found that select-level athletes had superior bimanual abilities. Lastly, we found an interaction of sex and skill across age. All groups achieved significant improvement in bimanual coordination with the exception of nonselect males. These data provide a description of normal bimanual coordination development in children during the developmentally crucial ages of 9–15 years, taking account of sex- and experience-related differences.
Availability of Peripheral Optic Flow Influences Whether Infants Cross a Visual Cliff
David I. Anderson, Audun Dahl, Joseph J. Campos, Kiren Chand, Minxuan He, and Ichiro Uchiyama
This report describes a novel test of the prediction that locomotion-induced changes in an infant’s functional utilization of peripheral lamellar optic flow (PLOF) for postural stability contributes to avoidance of the deep side of a visual cliff. To test the prediction, a corridor, with either low-textured or high-textured walls, was constructed to run the length of a visual cliff. The infants, 9.5-month-olds with varying amounts of hands-and-knees crawling experience, were randomly assigned to the low-texture (n = 30) or the high-texture condition (n = 32). Consistent with predictions, the findings revealed significant interactions between crawling experience and texture condition for the probability of crossing and the latency to venture onto the deep side of the cliff. Most notably, more experienced crawlers, but not less experienced crawlers, were significantly more likely to cross the visual cliff to the parents and ventured onto the cliff faster in the high-texture condition than in the low-texture condition. The availability of PLOF thus had an effect on infants’ crossing behavior on the visual cliff. We interpret these findings as evidence for a three-step process in which locomotor-induced changes in visual proprioception play a central role in the development of wariness of heights.