Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Attentional Focus Modulates Automatic Finger-tapping Movements
View through CrossRef
AbstractThe majority of human behaviors are composed of automatic movements (e.g., walking or finger-tapping) which are learned during nurturing and can be performed simultaneously without interfering with other tasks. One critical and yet to be examined assumption is that the attention system has the innate capacity to modulate automatic movements. The present study tests this assumption. Setting no deliberate goals for movement, we required sixteen participants to perform personalized and well-practiced finger-tapping movements in three experiments while focusing their attention on either different component fingers or away from movements. Using cutting-edge pose estimation techniques to quantify tapping trajectory, we showed that attention to movement can disrupt movement automaticity, as indicated by decreased inter-finger and inter-trial temporal coherence; facilitate the attended and inhibit the unattended movements in terms of tapping amplitude; and re-organize the action sequence into distinctive patterns according to the focus of attention. These findings demonstrate compelling evidence that attention can modulate automatic movements and provide an empirical foundation for theories based on such modulation in controlling human behavior.
Title: Attentional Focus Modulates Automatic Finger-tapping Movements
Description:
AbstractThe majority of human behaviors are composed of automatic movements (e.
g.
, walking or finger-tapping) which are learned during nurturing and can be performed simultaneously without interfering with other tasks.
One critical and yet to be examined assumption is that the attention system has the innate capacity to modulate automatic movements.
The present study tests this assumption.
Setting no deliberate goals for movement, we required sixteen participants to perform personalized and well-practiced finger-tapping movements in three experiments while focusing their attention on either different component fingers or away from movements.
Using cutting-edge pose estimation techniques to quantify tapping trajectory, we showed that attention to movement can disrupt movement automaticity, as indicated by decreased inter-finger and inter-trial temporal coherence; facilitate the attended and inhibit the unattended movements in terms of tapping amplitude; and re-organize the action sequence into distinctive patterns according to the focus of attention.
These findings demonstrate compelling evidence that attention can modulate automatic movements and provide an empirical foundation for theories based on such modulation in controlling human behavior.
Related Results
Developing and assessing a new web-based tapping test for measuring distal movement in Parkinson’s disease: a Distal Finger Tapping test
Developing and assessing a new web-based tapping test for measuring distal movement in Parkinson’s disease: a Distal Finger Tapping test
AbstractDisability in Parkinson’s disease (PD) is measured by standardised scales including the MDS-UPDRS, which are subject to high inter and intra-rater variability and fail to c...
Eye and hand movements disrupt attentional control
Eye and hand movements disrupt attentional control
AbstractVoluntary attentional control is the ability to selectively focus on a subset of visual information in the presence of other competing stimuli. While it is well established...
Effects of Planting Density on Growth and Yield Attributes of Rubber Trees (Hevea brasiliensis)
Effects of Planting Density on Growth and Yield Attributes of Rubber Trees (Hevea brasiliensis)
This study aimed to identify rubber clones, suitable for rubber-timber production. An experiment was established in randomized complete block design to evaluate the effects of two ...
Structural Loading of the Lower Lumbar Area in Different Level of Rubber Tapping
Structural Loading of the Lower Lumbar Area in Different Level of Rubber Tapping
Around half of professional rubber tappers are known to have low back pain. It is speculated that this is due to prolonged lateral and forward bending of the trunk. Yet assessment ...
Differential neural plasticity of individual fingers revealed by fMRI neurofeedback
Differential neural plasticity of individual fingers revealed by fMRI neurofeedback
AbstractPrevious work has shown that fMRI activity patterns associated with individual fingers can be shifted by temporary impairment of the hand. Here, we investigated whether the...
Neural mechanisms underlying anxiety-related deficits of attentional inhibition: direct ERP evidence from the Pd component
Neural mechanisms underlying anxiety-related deficits of attentional inhibition: direct ERP evidence from the Pd component
AbstractBehavioral evidence shows that anxious individuals tend to be distracted by irrelevant stimulation not only for threat-related stimuli but also for non-emotional neutral st...
The Power of the Wave: Activism Rainbow Region-Style
The Power of the Wave: Activism Rainbow Region-Style
Introduction The counterculture that arose during the 1960s and 1970s left lasting social and political reverberations in developed nations. This was a time of increasing affluenc...
Finger Localization and Finger Praxis
Finger Localization and Finger Praxis
The relations between finger localization and various types of finger praxis were assessed by estimates of the inter-correlations among the performance of 100 six-year-old children...

