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eye-hand coordination

n. (alternative form of hand-eye coordination English)

Wikipedia
Eye–hand coordination

Eye–hand coordination (also known as hand–eye coordination) is the coordinated control of eye movement with hand movement, and the processing of visual input to guide reaching and grasping along with the use of proprioception of the hands to guide the eyes. Eye–hand coordination has been studied in activities as diverse as the movement of solid objects such as wooden blocks, archery, sporting performance, music reading, computer gaming, copy-typing, and even tea-making. It is part of the mechanisms of performing everyday tasks; in its absence most people would be unable to carry out even the simplest of actions such as picking up a book from a table or playing a video game. While it is recognized by the term hand–eye coordination, without exception medical sources, and most psychological sources, refer to eye–hand coordination.

Usage examples of "eye-hand coordination".

We keep a large supply two floors down to increase eye-hand coordination in stationary personnel.

They're in it because of boredom or snobbery, and they'll stop before they have their eye-hand coordination.

Powerful selective forces were at work to evolve organisms with grace and agility, accurate binocular vision, versatile manipulative abilities, superb eye-hand coordination, and an intuitive grasp of Newtonian gravitation.

Then, using his highly precise eye-hand coordination, he snatched one out of the air.

Their eye-hand coordination was impressive (maybe the Eugenics Council had done something right).

He picked out the smoothest pieces of ground, utilizing his precise eye-hand coordination to steer so that the tires would get the best traction and the clearest path.

She claimed it was a skill that fostered patience and eye-hand coordination.

These chain-smoking professors were sports specialists in eye-hand coordination and musculature conditioning.

Owen mastered the scales and the notes - nothing wrong with his memory, his lungs, or his eye-hand coordination - but we never heard him taking off, surprising himself with something new, blissing himself out.