Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.10.27.356584v1?rss=1 Authors: Mizrachi, N., Nelinger, G., Ahissar, E., Arieli, A. Abstract: Hand movements are essential for tactile perception of objects. However, why different individuals converge on specific movement patterns is not yet clear. Focusing on planar shape perception, we tracked the hands of 11 participants while they practiced shape recognition. Our results show that planar shape perception is mediated by contour-following movements, either tangential to the contour or spatially-oscillating perpendicular to it, and by scanning movements, crossing between distant parts of the shapes' contour. Both strategies exhibited non-uniform coverage of the shapes' contours. We found that choice of strategy during the first experimental session was strongly correlated with two idiosyncratic parameters: participants with lower tactile resolution tended to move faster; and faster-adapting participants tended to employ oscillatory movements more often. In addition, practicing on isolated geometric features increased the tendency to use the contour-following strategy. These results provide insights into the processes of strategy selection in tactile perception. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info