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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 10, 2026

Visualization Method for Proprioceptive Drift on a 2D Plane Using Support Vector Machine
07:05

Visualization Method for Proprioceptive Drift on a 2D Plane Using Support Vector Machine

Published on: October 27, 2016

Shape distortion produced by isolated mismatch between vision and proprioception.

Nicole Malfait1, Denise Y Henriques, Paul L Gribble

  • 1Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada. nicole.malfait@univ-provence.fr

Journal of Neurophysiology
|November 6, 2007
PubMed
Summary

This study explored how the brain adapts to visual-motor mismatches during tracking tasks. Findings suggest visuomotor adaptation does not globally realign visual and proprioceptive spaces, impacting both active and passive limb perception.

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Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Motor Control
  • Perception

Background:

  • Visuomotor transformation studies often use pointing tasks to examine adaptation to visual-proprioceptive mismatches.
  • Previous research yielded conflicting results regarding the spatial generalization of visuomotor adaptation, with some suggesting global realignment and others limited transfer.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the nature of visuomotor transformation and spatial generalization of adaptation.
  • To examine how localized visuomotor remapping affects a visuomanual tracking task and subsequent perception.

Main Methods:

  • Subjects performed a 2D visuomanual tracking task with a localized visual shift of hand feedback.
  • Adaptation was assessed by analyzing hand path distortions during tracking.
  • A visuoproprioceptive matching task evaluated the perception of passive limb movements post-adaptation.

Main Results:

  • Hand paths showed distortions inconsistent with a global realignment of visual and proprioceptive spaces after adaptation.
  • These distortions were observed not only in active movements but also in the perception of passive limb movements.

Conclusions:

  • Visuomotor adaptation to localized spatial remapping does not support a global realignment hypothesis.
  • The observed distortions indicate that visuomotor adaptation influences both motor execution and sensory perception of limb position.