4.2 Article

Contemporary theories of 1/f noise in motor control

Journal

HUMAN MOVEMENT SCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue 5, Pages 889-905

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.humov.2010.07.006

Keywords

1/f noise; Long-range dependence; Coordination; Variability

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1/f noise has been discovered in a number of time series collected in psychological and behavioral experiments. This ubiquitous phenomenon has been ignored for a long time and classical models were not designed for accounting for these long-range correlations. The aim of this paper is to present and discuss contrasted theoretical perspectives on 1/f noise, in order to provide a comprehensive overview of current debates in this domain. In a first part, we propose a formal definition of the phenomenon of 1/f noise, and we present some commonly used methods for measuring long-range correlations in time series. In a second part, we develop a theoretical position that considers 1/f noise as the hallmark of system complexity. From this point of view, 1/f noise emerges from the coordination of the many elements that compose the system. In a third part, we present a theoretical counterpoint suggesting that 1/f noise could emerge from localized sources within the system. In conclusion, we try to draw some lines of reasoning for going beyond the opposition between these two approaches. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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