PMID: 9644292Jun 30, 1998Paper

Relative coordination reconsidered: a stochastic account

Motor Control
D R CollinsM T Turvey

Abstract

Von Holst (1939/1973) parsed intersegmental coordination into relative and absolute to distinguish moderate and extreme forms. Kelso and DeGuzman (1992) discussed an interpretation of relative coordination in terms of the chaotic phenomenon of intermittency. The data of concern (DeGuzman &amp Kelso, 1991) do not, however, exclude a stochastic interpretation, which is detailed here following earlier suggestions. The key difference is modeling relative coordination by stochastic variability about weak attractors rather than by deterministic variability about remnants of attractors ("ghost attractors"). The intermittency interpretation is not robust in the presence of noise and, therefore, is not well disposed to account for uncertainty in detailing a model of behavioral data or its parameters. In contrast, the stochastic interpretation is based upon an approximation of unknown underlying processes in the form of Gaussian white noise. A stochastic method for estimating model parameters from a stationary probability distribution and a mean first passage time is illustrated using experimental and simulated data.

References

Jan 1, 1991·Biological cybernetics·G C deGuzman, J A Kelso
Jan 1, 1986·Biological cybernetics·G SchönerJ A Kelso
Nov 28, 2002·Journal of Motor Behavior·S. MitraM. T. Turvey
Mar 1, 1992·Journal of Motor Behavior·G SchönerJ A Kelso

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Citations

Feb 15, 2001·Journal of Motor Behavior·Dagmar SternadElliot L. Saltzman
Jun 12, 2002·Journal of Motor Behavior·Michael A Riley, M T Turvey
Jul 20, 2018·Experimental Brain Research·Mitchell Tillman, Satyajit Ambike
Feb 15, 2001·Journal of Motor Behavior·Dagmar SternadElliot L. Saltzman

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