Effects of head orientation and lateral body tilt on egocentric coding: cognitive and sensory-motor accuracy. 2006

J-M Prieur, and C Bourdin, and F Sarès, and J-L Vercher
Laboratoire Mouvement amp; Perception, Faculté des Sciences du Sport, CNRS & Université de la Méditerranée, Marseille, France.

A major issue in motor control studies is to determine whether and how we use spatial frames of reference to organize our spatially oriented behaviors. In previous experiments we showed that simulated body tilt during off-axis rotation affected the performance in verbal localization and manual pointing tasks. It was hypothesized that the observed alterations were at least partly due to a change in the orientation of the egocentric frame of reference, which was indeed centered on the body but aligned with the gravitational vector. The present experiments were designed to test this hypothesis in a situation where no inertial constraints (except the usual gravitational one) exist and where the orientation of the body longitudinal z-axis was not aligned with the direction of the gravity. Eleven subjects were exposed to real static body tilt and were required to verbally localize (experiment 1) and to point as accurately as possible towards (experiment 2) memorized visual targets, in two conditions, Head-Free and Head-Fixed conditions. Results show that the performance was only affected by real body tilt in the localization task performed when the subject's head was tilted relative to the body. Thus, dissociation between gravity and body longitudinal z-axis alone is not responsible for localization nor for pointing errors. Therefore, the egocentric frame of reference seems independent from the orientation of the gravity with regard to body z-axis as expected from our previous studies. Moreover, the use of spatial referentials appears to be less mandatory than expected for pointing movements (motor task) than for localization task (cognitive task).

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008297 Male Males
D009949 Orientation Awareness of oneself in relation to time, place and person. Cognitive Orientation,Mental Orientation,Psychological Orientation,Cognitive Orientations,Mental Orientations,Orientation, Cognitive,Orientation, Mental,Orientation, Psychological,Orientations,Orientations, Cognitive,Orientations, Mental,Orientations, Psychological,Psychological Orientations
D011187 Posture The position or physical attitude of the body. Postures
D011597 Psychomotor Performance The coordination of a sensory or ideational (cognitive) process and a motor activity. Perceptual Motor Performance,Sensory Motor Performance,Visual Motor Coordination,Coordination, Visual Motor,Coordinations, Visual Motor,Motor Coordination, Visual,Motor Coordinations, Visual,Motor Performance, Perceptual,Motor Performance, Sensory,Motor Performances, Perceptual,Motor Performances, Sensory,Perceptual Motor Performances,Performance, Perceptual Motor,Performance, Psychomotor,Performance, Sensory Motor,Performances, Perceptual Motor,Performances, Psychomotor,Performances, Sensory Motor,Psychomotor Performances,Sensory Motor Performances,Visual Motor Coordinations
D003071 Cognition Intellectual or mental process whereby an organism obtains knowledge. Cognitive Function,Cognitions,Cognitive Functions,Function, Cognitive,Functions, Cognitive
D005260 Female Females
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D000328 Adult A person having attained full growth or maturity. Adults are of 19 through 44 years of age. For a person between 19 and 24 years of age, YOUNG ADULT is available. Adults
D014794 Visual Fields The total area or space visible in a person's peripheral vision with the eye looking straightforward. Field, Visual,Fields, Visual,Visual Field
D019416 Head Movements Voluntary or involuntary motion of head that may be relative to or independent of body; includes animals and humans. Head Movement,Movement, Head,Movements, Head

Related Publications

J-M Prieur, and C Bourdin, and F Sarès, and J-L Vercher
November 1972, Journal of experimental psychology,
J-M Prieur, and C Bourdin, and F Sarès, and J-L Vercher
June 1966, The American journal of psychology,
J-M Prieur, and C Bourdin, and F Sarès, and J-L Vercher
August 1970, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology,
J-M Prieur, and C Bourdin, and F Sarès, and J-L Vercher
April 2001, Perception & psychophysics,
J-M Prieur, and C Bourdin, and F Sarès, and J-L Vercher
April 1992, Vision research,
J-M Prieur, and C Bourdin, and F Sarès, and J-L Vercher
January 2014, Advanced biomedical research,
J-M Prieur, and C Bourdin, and F Sarès, and J-L Vercher
April 2023, Multisensory research,
J-M Prieur, and C Bourdin, and F Sarès, and J-L Vercher
September 1993, Nippon Ganka Gakkai zasshi,
J-M Prieur, and C Bourdin, and F Sarès, and J-L Vercher
February 2017, Journal of neurophysiology,
Copied contents to your clipboard!