Testing anxiety's effect on movement planning and correction: Online upper-limb corrections are not completely automatic

Via three experiments, we investigated heightened anxiety's effect on the offline planning and online correction of upper-limb target-directed aiming movements. In Experiment 1, the majority of task trials allowed for the voluntary distribution of offline planning and online correction to achie...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human movement science 2023-02, Vol.87, p.103022-103022, Article 103022
Hauptverfasser: Lawrence, Gavin P., Owen, Robin, Gottwald, Victoria M., Khan, Michael A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Via three experiments, we investigated heightened anxiety's effect on the offline planning and online correction of upper-limb target-directed aiming movements. In Experiment 1, the majority of task trials allowed for the voluntary distribution of offline planning and online correction to achieve task success, while a subset of cursor jump trials necessitated the use of online correction to achieve task success. Experiments 2 and 3 replicated and elaborated Experiment 1 by assessing movement-specific reinvestment propensity and manipulating the self-control resources of participants. This allowed more detailed inference of cognitive resource utilisation to tease apart the effects of conscious processing and distraction-based anxiety mechanisms. For the first time, we demonstrate that: anxiety-induced online-to-offline motor control shifts can be overridden when the need for online correction is necessitated (i.e., in jump trials); anxiety-induced online-to-offline shifts seem to be positively predicted by conscious processing propensity; and optimal spatial efficacy of limb information-based online correction seems to require cognitive resources. We conclude that long-standing definitions of limb information-based online correction require revision, and that both conscious processing and distraction theories appear to play a role in determining the control strategies of anxiety induced upper limb target directed aiming movements. •Anxiety/distraction-compensatory resources benefit movement planning and correction.•Task and personality also influence movement correction when anxious.•Online limb correction processes are not wholly ‘automatic and attention free’.
ISSN:0167-9457
1872-7646
DOI:10.1016/j.humov.2022.103022