Force reflections of auditory and tactile action-effect weighting in motor planning.

Sci Rep

HUN-REN Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology, Budapest, Hungary.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Most voluntary actions have a few goals, allowing individuals to choose how to execute them with considerable freedom.
  • Research shows that elements unrelated to the main task, like sound intensity, can affect how force is applied during actions, reflecting their significance in how actions are mentally represented.
  • In this study, participants exerted more force when there were no sounds or softer tones, suggesting that their motor planning adjusts based on the expected sensory feedback from actions.

Article Abstract

Most voluntary actions have only few goals, which provides considerable freedom in the selection of action parameters. Recent studies showed that task-irrelevant aspects of the task context influence the motor parameters of the actions in a way which seems to reflect the relative importance of these aspects within the underlying action representation. The present study investigated how the intensity of auditory action-effects affected force exertion patterns in a self-paced action production task. Participants applied force impulses with their index finger on a force-sensitive resistor every three seconds. In four separate conditions, force impulses elicited no sound, or elicited tones with 69, 59 or 49 dB intensity. The results showed that participants applied more force when tone intensity was lower, and when tones were absent. These force differences were also present in the first 60 ms following tone onset, implying that these reflected differences in motor planning. The results are compatible with the notion that actions are represented in terms of their sensory effects, which are weighted differently-presumably to maintain an optimal level of overall auditory and tactile stimulation in the present case. These results hint at the potential usefulness of motor parameters as readouts of action intentions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11310450PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-69444-xDOI Listing

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