Corrective response times in a coordinated eye-head-arm countermanding task

Author:

Tao Gordon123,Khan Aarlenne Z.24,Blohm Gunnar123

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Neuroscience Studies, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada

2. Canadian Action and Perception Network (CAPnet)

3. Association for Canadian Neuroinformatics and Computational Neuroscience (CNCN)

4. School of Optometry, University of Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Abstract

Inhibition of motor responses has been described as a race between two competing decision processes of motor initiation and inhibition, which manifest as the reaction time (RT) and the stop signal reaction time (SSRT); in the case where motor initiation wins out over inhibition, an erroneous movement occurs that usually needs to be corrected, leading to corrective response times (CRTs). Here we used a combined eye-head-arm movement countermanding task to investigate the mechanisms governing multiple effector coordination and the timing of corrective responses. We found a high degree of correlation between effector response times for RT, SSRT, and CRT, suggesting that decision processes are strongly dependent across effectors. To gain further insight into the mechanisms underlying CRTs, we tested multiple models to describe the distribution of RTs, SSRTs, and CRTs. The best-ranked model (according to 3 information criteria) extends the LATER race model governing RTs and SSRTs, whereby a second motor initiation process triggers the corrective response (CRT) only after the inhibition process completes in an expedited fashion. Our model suggests that the neural processing underpinning a failed decision has a residual effect on subsequent actions. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Failure to inhibit erroneous movements typically results in corrective movements. For coordinated eye-head-hand movements we show that corrective movements are only initiated after the erroneous movement cancellation signal has reached a decision threshold in an accelerated fashion.

Funder

Canadian Network for Research and Innovation in Machining Technology, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Canadian Foundation for Innovation

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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