Calibration and Alignment are Separable: Evidence From Prism Adaptation
摘要:
In 2 prism adaptation experiments, the authors investigated the effects of limb starting position visibility (visible or not visible) and visual feedback availability (early or late in target pointing movements). Thirty-two students participated in Experiment 1 and 24 students participated in Experiment 2. Independent of visual feedback availability, constant error was larger and variable error was smaller for target pointing when. limb starting position was visible during prism exposure. Independent of limb starting position visibility, aftereffects of prism exposure were determined by visual feedback availability. Those results support the hypothesis that calibration is determined by limb starting position visibility, whereas alignment is determined separately by visual feedback availability.
Haller, Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Seances de l'Academie des Sciences, 1912, vol. 154, p. 744
作者:Haller
DOI:——
日期:——
Dehydration of 2-phenyl-3-diphenylmethyleneisoborneol in acid media
作者:Donald C. Kleinfelter、Roger W. Aaron、Thomas J. Gerteisen、James M. Miller、Thomas B. Bennett
DOI:10.1021/jo01286a051
日期:1967.11
Calibration and Alignment are Separable: Evidence From Prism Adaptation
作者:Gordon M. Redding、Benjamin Wallace
DOI:10.1080/00222890109601923
日期:2001.12
In 2 prism adaptation experiments, the authors investigated the effects of limb starting position visibility (visible or not visible) and visual feedback availability (early or late in target pointing movements). Thirty-two students participated in Experiment 1 and 24 students participated in Experiment 2. Independent of visual feedback availability, constant error was larger and variable error was smaller for target pointing when. limb starting position was visible during prism exposure. Independent of limb starting position visibility, aftereffects of prism exposure were determined by visual feedback availability. Those results support the hypothesis that calibration is determined by limb starting position visibility, whereas alignment is determined separately by visual feedback availability.
Rupe; Silberstrom, Justus Liebigs Annalen der Chemie, 1918, vol. 414, p. 105