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Afferent contributions to digit force coupling and force level variation during performance of non-lift pinch. Neurocase 2006 Oct;12(5):300-6

Date

12/28/2006

Pubmed ID

17190752

DOI

10.1080/13554790601126039

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-33845941677 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   1 Citation

Abstract

Afferent contributions to the coordination of thumb and index finger forces during non-lift pinch were studied using an anesthetization case study design. Two subjects, one performing with and without digital anesthetization and one with intact sensation, produced dynamic pinch forces against a stable object, with and without visual feedback. Error corrections were less frequent post-anesthetization, and the cross correlation between digit forces was lower when sensation was removed. However, this decrease in cross correlation between digit forces seemed to reflect a loss in the magnitude of tightly coupled error corrections when sensation was removed, rather than more frequent deviations of force magnitude between the digit forces. Force-time output without visual feedback lacked these error corrections, and the correlation between digit forces remained high, irrespective of sensory status. Additionally, with vision occluded, the time rate of force change did not vary in a gradual manner as would be expected from a neural representation of a sinusoidal target, but was instead marked by sudden abrupt reversals of force rate of change, invariant of somatosensory status. The coupling of digit forces and rates of force change during non-lift pinch appear to be controlled primarily with feedforward mechanisms, where the lack of proprioceptive feedback does not seem to disrupt this coupling.

Author List

Moerchen VA, Gruben KG

Author

Victoria Moerchen BA,BS,MS,PhD Assistant Professor in the Human Movement Sciences department at University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Adult
Anesthesia
Female
Fingers
Hand Strength
Humans
Male
Psychomotor Performance
Spectrum Analysis
Time Factors
Weight Perception