2020
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00099.2020
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Coupling of head and hand movements during eye-head-hand coordination: there is more to reaching than meets eye

Abstract: Does arm reaching affect eye-head shifts? Does the head alter eye-hand coordinated movements? Sensorimotor research has focused on either eye-head or eye-hand coordination, with only occasional works studying all these effectors together. Arora et al. (Arora HK, Bharmauria V, Yan X, Sun S, Wang H, Crawford JD. J Neurophysiol 122: 1946–1961, 2019) examined eye-head-hand coordination for the first time in nonhuman primates and provide evidence suggesting that head and hand movements are more coupled than traditi… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…In a similar vein, Pelz et al (2001) showed a strong linkage between the head and hand movement trajectories, while the eye has a synergistic relationship instead of an obligatory one with them. Hadjidimitrakis (2020) hypothesizes that this strong head-arm coupling is a result of learned motor behaviors during feeding where the head and hand orientations are coordinated to bring food to the mouth. Head and hand coordination is not commonly studied, our results suggest the strong coupling between the two must be a consequence of a common neural code that drive this behavior.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a similar vein, Pelz et al (2001) showed a strong linkage between the head and hand movement trajectories, while the eye has a synergistic relationship instead of an obligatory one with them. Hadjidimitrakis (2020) hypothesizes that this strong head-arm coupling is a result of learned motor behaviors during feeding where the head and hand orientations are coordinated to bring food to the mouth. Head and hand coordination is not commonly studied, our results suggest the strong coupling between the two must be a consequence of a common neural code that drive this behavior.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%