• DocumentCode
    3684730
  • Title

    Preliminary analysis of non-dominant proprioceptive acuity and interlimb asymmetry in the human wrist

  • Author

    Sara Contu;Leonardo Cappello;Jürgen Konczak;Lorenzo Masia

  • Author_Institution
    School of Mechanical &
  • fYear
    2015
  • Firstpage
    3598
  • Lastpage
    3601
  • Abstract
    Proprioception provides information about limb configuration which are essential for planning and controlling its posture and movement. Asymmetries in the way dominant and non-dominant limbs exploit proprioceptive information have been previously evaluated, with contradictory results due to the difference in the employed methodology. A measure of proprioceptive acuity that does not reflect the influence of one limb on the other consists in the evaluation of the psychophysical threshold. This metric, evaluated separately for each limb and involving only passive movements, reflects a reliable measure of proprioceptive acuity. The aim of this work is to first evaluate the proprioceptive acuity of the non-dominant wrist joint in flexion/extension and adduction/abduction and to compare these results to the acuity of the dominant wrist. Data were collected during a unidirectional 2-alternative-forcedchoice test performed by six right-handed subjects. We found acuity of 1.31°, 1.26°, 1.33° and 1.63° respectively for abduction, adduction, extension and flexion of the non-dominant wrist. Acuity of the dominant wrist was assessed for five of the subjects for abduction and flexion and resulted lower (mean values were respectively 1.64° and 2.14°). The preliminary results suggest a leading role of the non-dominant wrist in the processing of the proprioceptive feedback.
  • Keywords
    "Wrist","Joints","Robots","Read only memory","Medical treatment","Reliability","Visualization"
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2015 37th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
  • ISSN
    1094-687X
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1558-4615
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/EMBC.2015.7319171
  • Filename
    7319171