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The effect of orientation on prehension movement time
Authors:Elsje van Bergen  Lisa M. van Swieten  Justin H. G. Williams  Mark Mon-Williams
Affiliation:(1) Faculty of Human Movement Sciences, Institute for Fundamental and Clinical Human Movement, Vrije Universiteit, Van der Boechorststraat 9, 1081 BT Amsterdam, The Netherlands;(2) College of Medicine and Life Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, AB24 2UB, Scotland, UK
Abstract:We explored the relationship between hand orientation and movement time. Three groups of participants (n = 8 per group) were asked to grasp an object rotated in one of the following planes: (1) coronal; (2) sagittal; (3) horizontal. In the coronal plane, the rotational requirements directly mapped onto the neuromuscular demands associated with a single joint-level degree of freedom movement. A simple lawful relationship was found between the extent of rotation (pronation or supination) and duration. Reach-to-grasp movements to objects rotated in the sagittal and horizontal plane produced different movement patterns. These patterns increased the muscle level degrees of freedom recruited (higher neuromuscular demands) and movement duration increased correspondingly though not in a simple manner. The results of the present study show unambiguously that object orientation influences the duration of reach-to-grasp movements.
Keywords:Orientation  Prehension  Movement  Coordination  Duration  Rotation
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