Title: Cursus Doelgericht Handelen (BPSN33)
1Cursus Doelgericht Handelen(BPSN33)
R.H. Cuijpers, J.B.J. Smeets and E. Brenner
(2004). On the relation between object shape and
grasping kinematics. J Neurophysiol, 91
2598-2606. R.H. Cuijpers, E. Brenner and J.B.J.
Smeets (2006). Grasping reveals visual
misjudgements of shape. Exp Brain Res 17532-44
2Topics
- 1st hour Control Variables in Grasping
- Opposing views on visuomotor control
- Research question
- 2nd hour Grasping elliptical cylinders
- Real cylinders
- Which positions?
- How to get there?
- Virtual cylinders
- Constant haptic feedback
- Veridical haptic feedback
- If time permits Modeling grip planning
- Conclusions
3Control variables in grasping
- Many levels of description
- Activity motor neurons
- Muscle activity (EMG)
- Posture (Joint angles)
- Kinetics (Forces, torques)
- Kinematics (Position, speed etc.)
- Task level
high
Degrees of Freedom (DoF)
low
4Control variables in grasping
- How does the brain plan/compute the desired
motor neuron output? - If movements are planned in task space
- little computational power needed for planning
stage - But
- Need to solve DoF-problem (Motor primitives)
- Cannot control everything (Stereotypic movements)
- Need low-level on-line control (e.g. stiffness
control)
5Control variables in grasping
- What is/are the correct level(s) of description
for movement planning and visuomotor control? - Method of research in visuomotor control
- Manipulate visual information / haptic feedback /
proprioceptive feedback - Measure effect on motor output
- Variables that have an effect are controlled
- Variables that have no effect are redundant
Haptic by touch Proprioceptor sensory
receptor in muscles, tendons or joints
6Opposing views on visuomotor control
- Fingertip positions and object size
- Milner Goodale perception vs. action
- Franz et al common source model
- Smeets Brenner position vs. size
- Fingertip positions and object orientation
- Glover Dixon planning vs. on-line control
- Smeets Brenner position vs. orientation
7perception vs. action
- Goodale (1993) Milner, Goodale (1993)
- RV lesions in occipito-parietal cortex (dorsal).
- DF damage in ventrolateral occipital areas due
to CO poisoning.
8perception vs. action
- Dorsal pathway for guiding movements (should be
veridical) - Ventral pathway for perception (perception of
shape, colour etc.)
9perception vs. action
- Agliotti, De Souza, Goodale (1995)
- Grip aperture NOT influenced by size-illusion.
- Due to separate processing of information for
perception and action.
10Common source model
- Franz et al (2000) equal effects of illusion
11Position vs. size
- Brenner, Smeets (1996)
- Size-illusion does not affect grip aperture, but
does affect the initial lifting force. - Explanation not size information is used but
position information. They are inconsistent.
12Planning vs. on-line control
- Glover Dixon (2001)
- Relative effect of illusion decreases with time
- ? Illusion mainly affects planning
13Position vs. orientation
- Smeets et al. (2002)
- Assumption illusion affects orientation, not
position - Also explains data of Glover and Dixon
14Research Question How is shape information used
for grasping?
- The visually perceived shape is deformed
- Shape (ventral) determines where it is best to
grasp an object (dorsal) - Grip locations not veridical
- Shape information could be used during planning
(ventral) or on-line control (dorsal) - Grip errors arise early or late in the movement
15Grasping elliptical cylindersreal cylinders
16Experimental design
- seven 10cm tall cylinders
- elliptical circumference with fixed 5cm axis
- variable axis 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 cm
17Experimental Design
18Experimental design
- Optotrak recorded traces of fingertips
- 2 distances x 7 shapes x 6 orientations 84
trials - 3 repetitions
- 10 subjects
19Experimental Design
20Example
21Which positions?
- Geometry grasping is stable at principle axes
22Which positions?
- Principle axes preferred. But systematic errors
23Which positions?
- Systematic "errors" depending on orientation.
24Which positions?
- Scaling grip orientation ? 0.7 except for aspect
ratios close to 1, ? 0.5
Scaling grip orientation slope 1
25Comfortable grip
Suppose grip orientation mixture between
cylinder orientation comfortable grip
- Prediction
- Slope a w-1
- Offset b -(w-1)f0
26Thus
- Subjects grasp principle axes, but make
systematic errors - Cannot be explained by comfort of posture
- Additional effect of deformation of perceived
shape
27How to get there?
28How to get there?
29How to get there?
- Gradual increase grip errors were planned that
way
- High correlation despite errors!
- Sudden drop at end Grip aperture automatically
corrected - Correlation much higher for max. grip aperture
than final grip aperture
30Thus
- Systematic errors already present in the planning
of the movement - Maximum Grip Aperture reflects planned size
rather than true size
31Grasping virtual cylinders
32Experimental design
33Experimental Design
34Experimental design
35Experimental design
- Constant haptic feedback
- Real cylinder is always circular
- Virtual cylinders 15 aspect ratios, 3
orientations - Veridical haptic feedback
- Virtual and real cylinders are the same, 7
aspect ratios and 2 orientations
36Constant haptic feedback
- Only half of the subjects scale their grip
orientation - If they do, the scaling of grip orientation is
similar to real objects (0.42)
37Constant haptic feedback
- Subjects hardly scale their max. grip aperture
- Scaling of max. grip aperture is much smaller
than for real objects (0.14 instead of 0.57)
38Thus
- Inconsistent haptic feedback reduces scaling
gains - Possible cause
- All subjects scale their grip aperture based on
the felt size - Scaling of grip orientation based on seen
orientation for only half of the subjects, and
the felt orientation for the other half
39Veridical haptic feedback
- Similar pattern of grip orientations for all
subjects - Scaling of grip orientation (0.58) close to those
for real objects (0.60)
40Veridical haptic feedback
- All subjects adjust their maximum grip aperture
- Scaling of max. grip aperture (0.39) much higher
and closer to real objects (0.57)
41Thus
- With consistent haptic feedback
- Scalings of grip orientation and grip aperture
close to those for real cylinders - Less variability between subjects
42Comparison of experiments
Real Cylinders
Consistent Feedback
Inconsistent Feedback
43Thus
- Natural grasping of virtual cylinders requires
veridical haptic feedback - Grip orientation and grip aperture can be scaled
independently
44Modeling grip planning
45Modeling grip planning
- Physical constraints
- Grip force through centre of mass
- Grip force perpendicular to surface
- Optimal grip along major or minor axis
- Biomechanical constraints
- For a given cylinder location there is a most
comfortable grip - Evident when grasping circular cylinder
46Modeling grip planning
- Assumptions
- The planned grip orientation is a weighted
average of the optimal and the comfortable grip
orientation - The weights follow from the expected cost
functions for comfort and mechanical stability
47Modeling grip planning
If
Then
(required)
48Modeling grip planning
- Perceptual errors change the perceived cylinder
orientation - The comfortable posture may also be uncertain
49Modeling grip planning
- If distributions are Gaussian with zero mean, we
get - For the circular cylinder w0, so that
50Modeling grip planning
- Each grip axis may be grasped in different modes
- Model predicts probability of each mode
51Modeling grip planning
- The model describes the relative costs for grip
comfort and mechanical stability - It predicts the relative probability of choosing
the major or minor axis - We can incorporate biases in the perceived
cylinder orientation - We can extend to more general shapes
52Conclusions
- Subjects plan their grasps to suboptimal
locations based on the perceived shape and the
anticipated (dis)comfort - Upon touching the surface the errors are
corrected - Haptic feedback is necessary for natural grasping
- With our model we can identify relative
contributions of comfort, stability and
perceptual errors
53Conclusions
- Visual shape information (slant, curvature) is
used for planning suitable grip locations
(position information) - Perceptual bias
- Bias due to comfort of posture
- No substantial on-line corrections ? On-line
control uses position information - When inconsistent, haptic and visual shape
information is combined differently for the
planning of grip aperture and grip orientation
54The end
55Stable grip of an ellipse