Authors
Thomas R Reppert, Ioannis Rigas, David J Herzfeld, Ehsan Sedaghat-Nejad, Oleg Komogortsev, Reza Shadmehr
Publication date
2018/8/1
Journal
Journal of neurophysiology
Volume
120
Issue
2
Pages
741-757
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Description
A common aspect of individuality is our subjective preferences in evaluation of reward and effort. The neural circuits that evaluate these commodities influence circuits that control our movements, raising the possibility that vigor differences between individuals may also be a trait of individuality, reflecting a willingness to expend effort. In contrast, classic theories in motor control suggest that vigor differences reflect a speed-accuracy trade-off, predicting that those who move fast are sacrificing accuracy for speed. Here we tested these contrasting hypotheses. We measured motion of the eyes, head, and arm in healthy humans during various elementary movements (saccades, head-free gaze shifts, and reaching). For each person we characterized their vigor, i.e., the speed with which they moved a body part (peak velocity) with respect to the population mean. Some moved with low vigor, while others moved with high …
Total citations
20182019202020212022202320241611139137
Scholar articles
TR Reppert, I Rigas, DJ Herzfeld, E Sedaghat-Nejad… - Journal of neurophysiology, 2018