4.4 Article

Gaze control during reaching is flexibly modulated to optimize task outcome

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
卷 126, 期 3, 页码 816-826

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00134.2021

关键词

eye-hand coordination; human; visuomotor control

资金

  1. University College London-NTT collaboration grant (Deep Brain Communication Science Project II) [JP16H06566]
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study examined how gaze control during reaching is modulated by task demands, finding that changes in reward contingencies can affect saccade latency and reach accuracy. Results showed that early saccades are costly for reaching, and the brain modulates inhibitory online coordination from the hand to the eye system depending on task requirements.
When reaching for an object with the hand, the gaze is usually directed at the target. In a laboratory setting, fixation is strongly maintained at the reach target until the reaching is completed, a phenomenon known as gaze anchoring. While conventional accounts of such tight eye-hand coordination have often emphasized the internal synergetic linkage between both motor systems, more recent optimal control theories regard motor coordination as the adaptive solution to task requirements. We here investigated to what degree gaze control during reaching is modulated by task demands. We adopted a gaze-anchoring paradigm in which participants had to reach for a target location. During the reach, they additionally had to make a saccadic eye movement to a salient visual cue presented at locations other than the target. We manipulated the task demands by independently changing reward contingencies for saccade reaction time (RT) and reaching accuracy. On average, both saccade RTs and reach error varied systematically with reward condition, with reach accuracy improving when the saccade was delayed. The distribution of the saccade RTs showed two types of eye movements: fast saccades with short RTs, and voluntary saccade with longer RTs. Increased reward for high reach accuracy reduced the probability of fast saccades but left their latency unchanged. The results suggest that gaze anchoring acts through a suppression of fast saccades, a mechanism that can be adaptively adjusted to the current task demands. NEW & NOTEWORTHY During visually guided reaching, our eyes usually fixate the target and saccades elsewhere are delayed (gaze anchoring). We here show that the degree of gaze anchoring is flexibly modulated by the reward contingencies of saccade latency and reach accuracy. Reach error became larger when saccades occurred earlier. These results suggest that early saccades are costly for reaching and the brain modulates inhibitory online coordination from the hand to the eye system depending on task requirements.

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