Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
W. Gooddy (1949)
Sensation and volition.Brain : a journal of neurology, 72 3
R. Chase, Seth Harvey, Susan Standfast, I. Rapin, S. Sutton (1959)
Comparison of the Effects of Delayed Auditory Feedback on Speech and Key TappingScience, 129
E. Adrian (1947)
General principles of nervous activity.Brain : a journal of neurology, 70 1
D. Denny-Brown (1950)
DISINTEGRATION OF MOTOR FUNCTION RESULTING FROM CEREBRAL LESIONSThe Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 112
F. Walshe (1947)
On the role of the pyramidal system in willed movements.Brain : a journal of neurology, 70 Pt 3
R. Chase, Seth Harvey, Susan Standfast, I. Rapin, S. Sutton (1961)
I: Effect of Delayed Auditory Feedback on Speech and KeytappingQuarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 13
J. Scott (1959)
Selected Writings of John Hughlings JacksonAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 116
C. Sherrington (1907)
Integrative Action of the Nervous System
R. Chase, G. Guilfoyle (1962)
Effect of simultaneous delayed and undelayed auditory feedback on speech.Journal of speech and hearing research, 5
R. Chase (1958)
Effect of delayed auditory feedback on the repetition of speech sounds.The Journal of speech and hearing disorders, 23 5
H. Knapp, E. Taub, A. Berman (1958)
Effect of Deafferentation on a Conditioned Avoidance ResponseScience, 128
A. Lassek, C. Woolsey, A. Walker, B. Boshes (1957)
The Pyramidal TractNeurology, 7
Provins Ka (1955)
The role of receptors in muscle and tendon in controlling the application of finger pressure in man.The Journal of Physiology, 128
H. Bastian (1910)
THE FUNCTIONS OF THE KINÆSTHETIC AREA OF THE BRAIN.Brain, 32
T. Twitchell (1954)
Sensory factors in purposive movement.Journal of neurophysiology, 17 3
A. Lassek (1953)
Potency of Isolated Brachial Dorsal Roots in Controlling Muscular PhysiologyNeurology, 3
Subjects were trained to tap a key continuously at a specific rate, and with a specific amount of pressure (regularity task). Performance of this task was studied under conditions of: (a) decreased auditory feedback (masking noise through earphones), (b) decreased visual feedback (tapping hand screened from view), (c) vibration (vibrators applied to forearm in order to “mask” proprioceptive feedback), (d) digital block of tapping finger, and (e) combination of all four conditions. Significant changes in rate and intensity of tapping resulted under conditions of decreased auditory feedback, vibration, and the combined condition.In the second part of the study, the effects of different delayed sensory events on keytapping were examined. The five conditions of delayed sensory feedback were: (a) delayed auditory feedback, (b) delayed visual feedback, (c) delayed tactile feedback, (d) the first three delayed sensory events presented simultaneously, and (e) condition (d) repeated with digital block of the tapping finger.The conditions of delayed sensory feedback did not markedly alter performance of the regularity task. The same conditions of delayed sensory feedback did, however, produce highly significant changes in the performance of a more complex pattern task. All of these delay conditions produced parallel changes in the pattern task, namely increased intensity and decreased rate of tapping. The fact that the pattern task is more disturbed by delayed sensory feedback than the regularity task suggests that temporal complexity of the task is one determinant of the degree to which it will be disturbed by a delay in sensory feedback.
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology – SAGE
Published: Sep 1, 1961
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.