• DocumentCode
    1342514
  • Title

    Lack of Predictive Control in Lifting Series of Virtual Objects by Individuals With Diplegic Cerebral Palsy

  • Author

    Mawase, Firas ; Bar-Haim, Simona ; Karniel, Amir

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Ben-Gurion Univ. of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel
  • Volume
    19
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    2011
  • Firstpage
    686
  • Lastpage
    695
  • Abstract
    To date, research on the motor control of hand function in cerebral palsy has focused on children with hemiplegia, although many persons with diplegic cerebral palsy (dCP) have asymmetrically decreased hand function. We explored the predictive capabilities of the motor system in a simple motor task of lifting a series of virtual objects for five persons with spastic dCP and five age-matched controls. When a person lifts an object, s/he uses an expectation of the weight of the object to generate a motor command. We asked the study subjects to lift a series of increasing weights and determined whether they extrapolated from past experience to predict the next weight in the series, even though that weight had never been experienced. Planning of precision grasp was assessed by measurement of the grip force at the beginning of the lifting task and by estimating the motor command. Execution of precision grasp was assessed by measurement of the time interval between the onset of grip and the onset of movement. We found that persons with dCP demonstrated a lack of predictive feed-forward control in their lifting movements: they exhibited a significantly longer time between onset of grip and onset of movement than the control subjects and they did not predict the weight of the next object in the lifting task. In addition, for subjects with dCP, the time between the onset of grip and the onset of movement of the dominant hand correlated strongly with the outcome of a hand function test. We postulate that a higher-order motor planning deficit in addition to execution deficit are evident in the subjects with spastic diplegic.
  • Keywords
    feedforward; gait analysis; handicapped aids; medical disorders; predictive control; diplegic cerebral palsy; grip force; hand function testing; hemiplegia; higher-order motor planning deficit; lifting movements; lifting series; motor command; motor system; precision grasp planning; predictive control; predictive feed-forward control; simple motor task; spastic diplegic; time interval measurement; virtual objects series; Grippers; Motor drives; Neurophysiology; Predictive control; Trajectory; Diplegic cerebral palsy; grip force; motor control; predictive control; Adult; Algorithms; Biomechanics; Cerebral Palsy; Data Interpretation, Statistical; Discrimination (Psychology); Feedback, Physiological; Female; Forecasting; Functional Laterality; Hand; Hand Strength; Humans; Learning; Lifting; Male; Psychomotor Performance; Software; User-Computer Interface; Weight Perception; Young Adult;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1534-4320
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TNSRE.2011.2170589
  • Filename
    6035988