misreach

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English

Etymology

From mis- +‎ reach.

Verb

misreach (third-person singular simple present misreaches, present participle misreaching, simple past and past participle misreached)

  1. To reach inaccurately.
    • 2004, Glyn Humphreys, Jane Riddoch, Attention in Action: Advances from Cognitive Neuroscience, page 319:
      When neurologically healthy individuals are first exposed to displacing prisms, they typically misreach in the direction of the visual displacement when pointing towards a visual target.
    • 2008, Gregory R. Bock, Jamie A. Goode, Sensory Guidance of Movement, page 316:
      Classically, patients with visuomotor apraxia misreach for objects in the visual field contralateral to the lesion (Rondot et al 1977).
    • 2012, J. Hyvärinen, The Parietal Cortex of Monkey and Man, page 161:
      Monkeys also show paucity of spontaneous movements in limbs contralateral to a lesion, misreach for targets and have difficulty in grasping.

Noun

misreach (countable and uncountable, plural misreaches)

  1. The act of misreaching.
    • 1968, Daniel Porter Kimble, Learning, Remembering, and Forgetting - Volume 4, page 66:
      Now the subject's misreach cannot be corrected if you don't give him information about his hand position .
    • 1998, Jinhua Guan, The Effect of Aging on Adaptive Eye-hand Coordination, page 31:
      The number of trials to criterion, the total distance of misreach, and the distance of the initial misreach after donning the prism goggles were measured.
    • 2012, George E. Stelmach, Volker Hömberg, Sensorimotor Impairment in the Elderly, page 61:
      The extent of a misreach could be determined from a scale located on the back of the apparatus, invisible to the subject, and the subject's accuracy was noted after each attempt.