On 2017 Mar 09, Lydia Maniatis commented:
First, I apologize for the error vis a vis the open-loop experiment.
With respect to "very standard procedures:" Vision science is riddled with references to "standard," "popular," "traditional" "common" "widely used" procedures that have no theoretical rationale. "It is considered safe" is also not a rationale.
With respect to fitting, you calculate r-squared by fitting data in the context of very specific conditions whose selection is without a clear rationale, and thus it is very likely that conditions similar in principle but different in detail would yield different results. For example, you use Gabors, which are widely used but seem to be based on the idea that the visual process performs a Fourier analysis - and a local one at that - for which there are no arguments in favor.
Your findings don't warrant any substantial conclusion. You claim in the paper that: “we have shown that eye and hand movements made toward identical targets can end up in different locations, revealing that they are based on different spatial information.” Only the former claim is true.
Your prior discussion reveals that the conclusions couldn't be more speculative and go far beyond the data : “This difference between hand movements and saccades might reflect the different functional specificity of the two systems… One interpretation of the current results is that there are two distinct spatial maps, or spatial representations, of the visual world.”
Your arguments in favor of this explanation are peppered with casual assumptions: "...the priority for the saccade system might be to shift the visual axis toward the target as fast as possible with little cost for small foveating errors. If integrating past sensory signals with the current input increases processing time (Greenwald, Knill, & Saunders, 2005), the saccadic system might prefer to use current input and maximize the speed of the eye movement. For hand movements instead, a small error might make the hand miss its target with potentially large behavioral costs."
Might + might + might + might (eleven in all in the discussion) means that the effect that you report is far too limited in its implications to warrant the claim you make, quite unequivocally, in your title. Most of your "mights" are not currently testable, and almost certainly represent an overly simplistic view of a system of which we have only the crudest understanding at the neural level. The meaning of the term "sensory signals" also needs clarification, as it also implies a misunderstanding of the nature of perceptual processes.
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