| Literature DB >> 29213051 |
Naveen Elangovan1,2, Leonardo Cappello3,4, Lorenzo Masia5, Joshua Aman6,7, Jürgen Konczak8,6.
Abstract
Proprioceptive function can become enhanced during motor learning. Yet, we have incomplete knowledge to what extent proprioceptive function is trainable and how a training that enhances proprioception may influence performance in untrained motor skills. To address this knowledge gap, healthy young adults (N = 14) trained in a visuomotor task that required learners to make increasingly accurate wrist movements. Using a robotic exoskeleton coupled with a virtual visual environment, participants tilted a virtual table through continuous wrist flexion/extension movements with the goal to position a rolling ball on table into a target. With learning progress, the level of difficulty increased by altering the virtual ball mechanics and the gain between joint movement and ball velocity. Before and after training, wrist position sense acuity and spatial movement accuracy in an untrained, discrete wrist-pointing task was assessed using the same robot. All participants showed evidence of proprioceptive-motor learning. Mean position sense discrimination threshold improved by 34%. Wrist movement accuracy in the untrained pointing task improved by 27% in 13/14 participants. This demonstrates that a short sensorimotor training challenging proprioception can a) effectively enhance proprioceptive acuity and b) improve the accuracy of untrained movement. These findings provide a scientific basis for applying such somatosensory-based motor training to clinical populations with known proprioceptive dysfunction to enhance sensorimotor performance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29213051 PMCID: PMC5719025 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-16704-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Effects of training on proprioceptive thresholds and movement accuracy. Each data point indicates the pre-post training values of a single participant. (A) Proprioceptive discrimination thresholds before and after training. The dashed line indicates the line of equality, indicating no change as a function of training. Note that all thresholds were either on or below the line of equality. Blue area marks the region of lower thresholds after training. (B) Movement accuracy error before and after training. Light red area marks the region of higher movement accuracy (lower error) after training. Note that that 10/14 participants exhibited movement accuracy error values within that region.
Figure 2Mean effects of training on proprioceptive discrimination thresholds and movement accuracy error. **Indicates p < 0.005 and * indicates p < 0.01. DT = discrimination threshold, MAE = movement accuracy error.
Figure 3Mapping gains in proprioceptive acuity against gains in movement accuracy. (A) Each participant’s sensorimotor gain is depicted as a vector. The coordinates of proprioceptive discrimination threshold and movement accuracy error score before training represent the origin of the vector. The vector length indicates the magnitude and the angle the direction of change. (B) Vectorgram of the relative gain. The same vectors as in (A) are shown with their origins aligned to coordinates (0,0). Vector length indicates relative change. Note that all but one vectors fall into quadrant of concurrent sensory and motor learning.
Figure 4Haptic wrist robot. (A) A participant using the haptic wrist robot. The participant’s forearm is positioned on the wrist robot’s forearm support splint. This position is maintained during psychophysical evaluation, movement accuracy evaluation, and training task. (B) Monitor displaying virtual table and virtual ball during the training task. The subject extends the wrist causing the table in the virtual reality monitor to tip to the right resulting in displacement of the ball to the right. (C) Order of the experiment protocol. All participants were tested in the same order.
Figure 5Assessment of proprioceptive acuity. (A) Changes in the stimulus size difference across trials of a single participant. Note how the trial-by-trial size difference was reduced quickly over the first 20 trials and probed values around the participant’s threshold. (B) The resulting proprioceptive acuity function based on participant’s verbal responses. The 75% correct response rate of the cumulative Gaussian distribution function refers to the proprioceptive discrimination threshold. (C) Movement accuracy evaluation. Exemplar data from one participant showing the error values across 20 trials before and after training.