Literature DB >> 34107225

Hand pose selection in a bimanual fine-manipulation task.

Kunpeng Yao1, Dagmar Sternad2,3,4, Aude Billard1.   

Abstract

Many daily tasks involve the collaboration of both hands. Humans dexterously adjust hand poses and modulate the forces exerted by fingers in response to task demands. Hand pose selection has been intensively studied in unimanual tasks, but little work has investigated bimanual tasks. This work examines hand poses selection in a bimanual high-precision-screwing task taken from watchmaking. Twenty right-handed subjects dismounted a screw on the watch face with a screwdriver in two conditions. Results showed that although subjects used similar hand poses across steps within the same experimental conditions, the hand poses differed significantly in the two conditions. In the free-base condition, subjects needed to stabilize the watch face on the table. The role distribution across hands was strongly influenced by hand dominance: the dominant hand manipulated the tool, whereas the nondominant hand controlled the additional degrees of freedom that might impair performance. In contrast, in the fixed-base condition, the watch face was stationary. Subjects used both hands even though single hand would have been sufficient. Importantly, hand poses decoupled the control of task-demanded force and torque across hands through virtual fingers that grouped multiple fingers into functional units. This preference for bimanual over unimanual control strategy could be an effort to reduce variability caused by mechanical couplings and to alleviate intrinsic sensorimotor processing burdens. To afford analysis of this variety of observations, a novel graphical matrix-based representation of the distribution of hand pose combinations was developed. Atypical hand poses that are not documented in extant hand taxonomies are also included.NEW & NOTEWORTHY We study hand poses selection in bimanual fine motor skills. To understand how roles and control variables are distributed across the hands and fingers, we compared two conditions when unscrewing a screw from a watch face. When the watch face needed positioning, role distribution was strongly influenced by hand dominance; when the watch face was stationary, a variety of hand pose combinations emerged. Control of independent task demands is distributed either across hands or across distinct groups of fingers.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bimanual skill; hand dominance; hand pose taxonomy; manipulation; role-differentiated bimanual manipulation

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34107225      PMCID: PMC8325606          DOI: 10.1152/jn.00635.2020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


  51 in total

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Authors:  Jarrod Blinch; Jason W Flindall; Łukasz Smaga; Kwanghee Jung; Claudia Lr Gonzalez
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2019-10-29       Impact factor: 1.972

10.  Addressing the gap: a blueprint for studying bimanual hand preference in infants.

Authors:  Sandy L Gonzalez; Eliza L Nelson
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2015-05-05
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  1 in total

1.  Highlights from the 30th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Neural Control of Movement.

Authors:  Marta Russo; Nofar Ozeri-Engelhard; Kathleen Hupfeld; Caroline Nettekoven; Simon Thibault; Ehsan Sedaghat-Nejad; Daniela Buchwald; David Xing; Omid Zobeiri; Konstantina Kilteni; Scott T Albert; Giacomo Ariani
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2021-08-18       Impact factor: 2.974

  1 in total

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