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Complex bimanual task (picking petals) during which a visual offset was applied to the hands. The offset increased slowly and only during interaction, the maximal amplitude was small (about 6.7 cm).
LocalizationPointing with both hands to oneself (with the thumbs), or to an external reference (with the index fingers), i.e. the basket. Localization required the hands to be still and to be in parallel. Fifty data samples - consisting of palm and finger positions - were recorded and used to obtain the dependent measures. In one block, participants performed localization with the hands visible, in the other block, the hands were invisible.
The distance of the mean palm centroids in pre- and post-localization might reveal adaptation of the center of hand space due to the visual offset.
Angular DisparityWhen performing the localization, a drift of the hand position might be compensated by rotating the palm. This rotation might reveal if information from other frames of reference is used to correct the error in hand space.
Positional DiscrepancyComplete compensation by rotation should yield a similar positional estimate in the post-localization as in the pre-localization. The remaining discrepancy can reveal the success of the correction. A discrepancy would imply that the conflict in hand space could not be completely compensated.
Compensation of the visual offset persisted in the localization task - especially when hands were visible. Apparently, the center of hand space shifted.
Angular DisparityPartial compensation of the drift which depended on visibility and the target reference. In general, participants showed stronger compensation in case of stronger drift.
Positional DiscrepancyWhen the hands remained visible, even for self-localization a systematic discrepancy was observed - manipulated visual information biased the positional estimate grounded in proprioceptive information.
Results on disparity and discrepancy show that adaptation was not restricted to hand space