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1.
J Mot Behav ; : 1-13, 2024 Jul 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39041372

RESUMO

Motor behaviour using upper-extremity prostheses of different levels is greatly variable, leading to challenges interpreting ideal rehabilitation strategies. Elucidating the underlying neural control mechanisms driving variability benefits our understanding of adaptation after limb loss. In this follow-up study, non-amputated participants completed simple and complex reach-to-grasp motor tasks using a body-powered transradial or partial-hand prosthesis simulator. We hypothesised that under complex task constraints, individuals employing variable grasp postures will show greater sensorimotor beta activation compared to individuals relying on uniform grasping, and activation will occur later in variable compared to uniform graspers. In the simple task, partial-hand variable and transradial users showed increased neural activation from the early to late phase of the reach, predominantly in the hemisphere ipsilateral to device use. In the complex task, only partial-hand variable graspers showed a significant increase in neural activation of the sensorimotor cortex from the early to the late phase of the reach. These results suggest that grasp variability may be a crucial component in the mechanism of neural adaptation to prosthesis use, and may be mediated by device level and task complexity, with implications for rehabilitation after amputation.

2.
Eur J Neurosci ; 54(7): 6520-6532, 2021 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34523764

RESUMO

Tools and objects are associated with numerous action possibilities that are reduced depending on the task-related internal and external constraints presented to the observer. Action hierarchies propose that goals represent higher levels of the hierarchy while kinematic patterns represent lower levels of the hierarchy. Prior work suggests that tool-object perception is heavily influenced by grasp and action context. The current study sought to evaluate whether the presence of action hierarchy can be perceptually identified using eye tracking during tool-object observation. We hypothesize that gaze patterns will reveal a perceptual hierarchy based on the observed task context and grasp constraints. Participants viewed tool-objects scenes with two types of constraints: task-context and grasp constraints. Task-context constraints consisted of correct (e.g., frying pan-spatula) and incorrect tool-object pairings (e.g., stapler-spatula). Grasp constraints involved modified tool orientations, which requires participants to understand how initially awkward grasp postures can help achieve the task. The visual scene contained three areas of interests (AOIs): the object, the functional tool-end (e.g., spoon handle) and the manipulative tool-end (e.g., spoon bowl). Results revealed two distinct processes based on stimuli constraints. Goal-oriented encoding, the attentional bias towards the object and manipulative tool-end, was demonstrated when grasp did not lead to meaningful tool-use. In images where grasp postures were critical to action performance, attentional bias was primarily between the object and functional tool-end, which suggests means-related encoding of the graspable properties of the object. This study expands from previous work and demonstrates a flexible constraint hierarchy depending on the observed task constraints.


Assuntos
Força da Mão , Desempenho Psicomotor , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Humanos , Orientação , Postura , Percepção Visual
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