The one-target advantage refers to the fact that a rapid aimed hand movement is executed faster when it is performed as a single, isolated movement than when it is performed as a member of a series. According to a recent account of this phenomenon, that is the movement integration hypothesis, the first movement in a series is slowed because implementation of the second movement may overlap with execution of the first. In this study, we tested the movement integration hypothesis by recording electromyographic (EMG) activity of six muscles acting at the shoulder in nine participants performing 1-tap and 2-tap aiming movements. Movement time results showed a reliable one-target advantage. EMG data indicated a pattern of differential EMG-activi...
These studies examined motion trajectories and electromyographic (EMG) activity patterns during huma...
Item does not contain fulltextAccording to Fitts' law, there is speed-accuracy trade-off in a wide v...
Abstract The kinematic, kinetic, and electromyograph-ic (EMG) patterns observed uring fast, single-j...
The one-target advantage refers to the fact that a rapid aimed hand movement is executed faster when...
A series of 8 experiments examined the phenomenon that a rapid aimed hand movement is executed faste...
Movement times to the first target in a 2-target sequence are typically slower than in 1-target aimi...
Rapid aimed hand movements have been shown to be executed faster when the hand stops on a target tha...
The execution of a fast aimed movement takes less time when it is performed in isolation than when i...
Movement times to a single target are typically shorter compared to when movement to a second target...
Understanding the control strategies that underlie multijoint limb movements is important to researc...
In this study we examined age differences in a movement paradigm that typically (i.e. with young adu...
Changes were studied in neuromotor control that were evoked by constraining the motion of the elbow ...
These studies examined motion trajectories and electromyographic (EMG) activity patterns during huma...
Item does not contain fulltextAccording to Fitts' law, there is speed-accuracy trade-off in a wide v...
Abstract The kinematic, kinetic, and electromyograph-ic (EMG) patterns observed uring fast, single-j...
The one-target advantage refers to the fact that a rapid aimed hand movement is executed faster when...
A series of 8 experiments examined the phenomenon that a rapid aimed hand movement is executed faste...
Movement times to the first target in a 2-target sequence are typically slower than in 1-target aimi...
Rapid aimed hand movements have been shown to be executed faster when the hand stops on a target tha...
The execution of a fast aimed movement takes less time when it is performed in isolation than when i...
Movement times to a single target are typically shorter compared to when movement to a second target...
Understanding the control strategies that underlie multijoint limb movements is important to researc...
In this study we examined age differences in a movement paradigm that typically (i.e. with young adu...
Changes were studied in neuromotor control that were evoked by constraining the motion of the elbow ...
These studies examined motion trajectories and electromyographic (EMG) activity patterns during huma...
Item does not contain fulltextAccording to Fitts' law, there is speed-accuracy trade-off in a wide v...
Abstract The kinematic, kinetic, and electromyograph-ic (EMG) patterns observed uring fast, single-j...