Measuring Memory and Attention to Preview in Motion Proceedings Paper

Jagacinski, RJ, Hammond, GM, Rizzi, E. (2017). Measuring Memory and Attention to Preview in Motion . HUMAN FACTORS, 59(5), 796-810. 10.1177/0018720817695193

cited authors

  • Jagacinski, RJ; Hammond, GM; Rizzi, E

authors

abstract

  • Objective Use perceptual-motor responses to perturbations to reveal the spatio-temporal detail of memory for the recent past and attention to preview when participants track a winding roadway. Background Memory of the recently passed roadway can be inferred from feedback control models of the participants' manual movement patterns. Similarly, attention to preview of the upcoming roadway can be inferred from feedforward control models of manual movement patterns. Method Perturbation techniques were used to measure these memory and attention functions. Results In a laboratory tracking task, the bandwidth of lateral roadway deviations was found to primarily influence memory for the past roadway rather than attention to preview. A secondary auditory/verbal/vocal memory task resulted in higher velocity error and acceleration error in the tracking task but did not affect attention to preview. Attention to preview was affected by the frequency pattern of sinusoidal perturbations of the roadway. Conclusion Perturbation techniques permit measurement of the spatio-temporal span of memory and attention to preview that affect tracking a winding roadway. They also provide new ways to explore goal-directed forgetting and spatially distributed attention in the context of movement. More generally, these techniques provide sensitive measures of individual differences in cognitive aspects of action. Application Models of driving behavior and assessment of driving skill may benefit from more detailed spatio-temporal measurement of attention to preview.

publication date

  • August 1, 2017

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 796

end page

  • 810

volume

  • 59

issue

  • 5