Abstract

A computer joystick is an efficient and cost-effective response device for recording continuous movements in psychological experiments. Movement trajectories and other measures from continuous responses have expanded the insights gained from discrete responses (e.g., button presses) by providing unique information about how cognitive processes unfold over time. However, few studies have evaluated the validity of joystick responses with reference to conventional key presses, and how response modality can affect cognitive processes. Here we systematically compared human participants’ behavioral performance of perceptual decision-making when they responded with either joystick movements or key presses in a four-alternative motion discrimination task. We found evidence that the response modality did not affect raw behavioral measures, including decision accuracy and mean response time, at the group level. Furthermore, to compare the underlying decision processes between the two response modalities, we fitted a drift-diffusion model of decision-making to individual participants’ behavioral data. Bayesian analyses of the model parameters showed no evidence that switching from key presses to continuous joystick movements modulated the decision-making process. These results supported continuous joystick actions as a valid apparatus for continuous movements, although we highlight the need for caution when conducting experiments with continuous movement responses.

Highlights

  • A computer joystick is an efficient and cost-effective response device for recording continuous movements in psychological experiments

  • The behavioral performance of the four-alternative motion discrimination task was quantified by accuracy and mean response time (RT) (Fig. 2b)

  • In a four-alternative motion discrimination task, joystick movements and key presses led to similar accuracy and mean RTs

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Summary

Introduction

A computer joystick is an efficient and cost-effective response device for recording continuous movements in psychological experiments. Bayesian analyses of the model parameters showed no evidence that switching from key presses to continuous joystick movements modulated the decision-making process. Patients with motor function impairments (e.g., tremor, apraxia, or loss of dexterity) often omit button presses, press the button too early or too late, press wrong buttons accidentally, or are confused by the response-button mapping This limitation may result in a significant amount of experiment data being rejected in some studies (Wessel, Verleger, Nazarenus, Vieregge, & Kömpf, 1994), whereas continuous responses with natural movements can be well-tolerated in patients (Limousin et al, 1997; Strafella, Dagher, & Sadikot, 2003)

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