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J Neurophysiol 98: 3614-3626, 2007. First published September 5, 2007; doi:10.1152/jn.00652.2007
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Different Learned Coordinate Frames for Planning Trajectories and Final Positions in Reaching

Claude Ghez1,*, Robert Scheidt2,3,4,* and Hank Heijink1

1Department of Neuroscience, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, New York; 2Department of Biomedical Engineering, Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; 3Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois; and 4Sensory Motor Performance Program, Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

Submitted 3 August 2006; accepted in final form 3 September 2007

We previously reported that the kinematics of reaching movements reflect the superimposition of two separate control mechanisms specifying the hand's spatial trajectory and its final equilibrium position. We now asked whether the brain maintains separate representations of the spatial goals for planning hand trajectory and final position. One group of subjects learned a 30° visuomotor rotation about the hand's starting point while performing a movement reversal task ("slicing") in which they reversed direction at one target and terminated movement at another. This task required accuracy in acquiring a target mid-movement. A second group adapted while moving to—and stabilizing at—a single target ("reaching"). This task required accuracy in specifying an intended final position. We examined how learning in the two tasks generalized both to movements made from untrained initial positions and to movements directed toward untrained targets. Shifting initial hand position had differential effects on the location of reversals and final positions: Trajectory directions remained unchanged and reversal locations were displaced in slicing whereas final positions of both reaches and slices were relatively unchanged. Generalization across directions in slicing was consistent with a hand-centered representation of desired reversal point as demonstrated previously for this task whereas the distributions of final positions were consistent with an eye-centered representation as found previously in studies of pointing in three-dimensional space. Our findings indicate that the intended trajectory and final position are represented in different coordinate frames, reconciling previous conflicting claims of hand-centered (vectorial) and eye-centered representations in reach planning.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: C. Ghez, Ctr. for Neurobiology and Behavior, Columbia Univ. Medical School, 1051 Riverside Dr., New York, NY 10032 (E-mail: cpgl{at}columbia.edu)




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X. Liu and R. A. Scheidt
Contributions of Online Visual Feedback to the Learning and Generalization of Novel Finger Coordination Patterns
J Neurophysiol, May 1, 2008; 99(5): 2546 - 2557.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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