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      Visual delay affects force scaling and weight perception when lifting objects in virtual reality: Supplemental model code

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      bioRxiv

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          Abstract

          Lifting an object requires precise scaling of fingertip forces based on a prediction of object weight. At object contact, a series of tactile and visual events arise that need to be rapidly processed online to fine-tune the planned motor commands for lifting the object. The brain mechanisms underlying multisensory integration serially at transient sensorimotor events, a general feature of actions requiring hand-object interactions, are not yet understood. Here we tested the relative weighting between haptic and visual signals when they are integrated online into the motor command. We used a new virtual reality setup to desynchronize visual feedback from haptics, which allowed us to probe the relative contribution of haptics and vision in driving participants' movements when they grasped virtual objects simulated by two force-feedback robots. We found that visual delay changed the profile of fingertip force generation and led participants to perceive objects as heavier than when lifts were performed without visual delay. We further modeled the effect of vision on motor output by manipulating the extent to which delayed visual events could bias the force profile, which allowed us to determine the specific weighting the brain assigns to haptics and vision. Our results show for the first time how visuo-haptic integration is processed at discrete sensorimotor events for controlling object lifting dynamics and further highlight the organization of multisensory signals online for controlling action and perception.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          bioRxiv
          December 21 2018
          Article
          10.1101/504563
          8b10d138-0e0e-4038-85b4-c852aebdce34
          © 2018
          History

          Molecular medicine,Neurosciences
          Molecular medicine, Neurosciences

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