| Literature DB >> 35426511 |
Yuqi Liu1,2, James Caracoglia3,4, Sriparna Sen3, Erez Freud5,6, Ella Striem-Amit7.
Abstract
While reaching and grasping are highly prevalent manual actions, neuroimaging studies provide evidence that their neural representations may be shared between different body parts, i.e., effectors. If these actions are guided by effector-independent mechanisms, similar kinematics should be observed when the action is performed by the hand or by a cortically remote and less experienced effector, such as the foot. We tested this hypothesis with two characteristic components of action: the initial ballistic stage of reaching, and the preshaping of the digits during grasping based on object size. We examined if these kinematic features reflect effector-independent mechanisms by asking participants to reach toward and to grasp objects of different widths with their hand and foot. First, during both reaching and grasping, the velocity profile up to peak velocity matched between the hand and the foot, indicating a shared ballistic acceleration phase. Second, maximum grip aperture and time of maximum grip aperture of grasping increased with object size for both effectors, indicating encoding of object size during transport. Differences between the hand and foot were found in the deceleration phase and time of maximum grip aperture, likely due to biomechanical differences and the participants' inexperience with foot actions. These findings provide evidence for effector-independent visuomotor mechanisms of reaching and grasping that generalize across body parts.Entities:
Keywords: Effector-independent; Grasping; Motor cortex; Reaching; Visuomotor
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35426511 PMCID: PMC9142431 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-022-06359-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Brain Res ISSN: 0014-4819 Impact factor: 2.064
Fig. 1Setup of the sensors and stimuli. For both the hand and foot, one LED sensor was attached to the tip of each of the first two digits. Efron blocks were used as objects
Fig. 2Comparison of the reaching velocity profile between the hand and the foot. A Velocity profile as a function of absolute time. B Velocity profile over percentage movement time. Vertical lines denote time of peak velocity calculated from raw, unnormalized data. Overall the hand and the foot showed remarkably similar velocity profiles, especially from movement onset to peak velocity. Error bars denote standard errors
Summary of the results from the reaching task
| Transport parameter | Hand (mean (SE)) | Foot (mean (SE)) | BF10 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Movement duration (s) | 1.05 (0.05) | 1.16 (0.04) | 2.27, 0.041a | |
| Time to peak velocity (s) | 0.310 (0.017) | 0.321 (0.013) | 0.62, 0.549 | 0.32b |
| Time to peak velocity (%) | 30.4 (1.68) | 28.0 (1.00) | 1.48, 0.163 | 0.66 |
| Peak velocity to peak deceleration (s) | 0.335 (0.054) | 0.289 (0.025) | 0.77, 0.457 | 0.35 |
| Time after peak deceleration (s) | 0.403 (0.060) | 0.567 (0.030) | 2.61, 0.021a | |
| Peak deceleration (mm/s2) | − 9797.4 (1526.9) | − 11,794.2 (1306.4) | 1.01, 0.329 | 0.42 |
| Peak velocity (mm/s) | 771.4 (38.4) | 847.8 (23.1) | 2.05, 0.062 | 2 |
aSignificant t tests supporting difference between hand and foot
bBF10 less than 1/3 supporting no difference between hand and foot
Fig. 3Comparison of the velocity profile between the hand and the foot in the grasping task. A. Velocity profile as a function of absolute time. B Velocity profile over percentage movement time. Vertical lines denote time of peak velocity calculated from raw, unnormalized data, averaged across object sizes given no main effect of object size. The hand and the foot showed remarkably similar velocity profiles in absolute time up to peak velocity, with a longer deceleration phase for the foot. Error bars denote standard errors
Effect of effector on transport dependent variables in the grasping task
| Transport parameter | Hand (mean (SE)) | Foot (mean (SE)) | BF10 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Movement duration (s) | 1.09 (0.05) | 1.58 (0.10) | 32.85, < 0.001a | |
| Time to peak velocity (s) | 0.316 (0.015) | 0.320 (0.018) | 0.08, 0.785 | 0.28b |
| Time to peak velocity (%) | 29.4 (1.01) | 21.0 (0.93) | 37.77, < 0.001a | |
| Peak velocity to peak deceleration (s) | 0.255 (0.034) | 0.398 (0.020) | 23.70, < 0.001a | |
| Time after peak deceleration (s) | 0.530 (0.037) | 0.955 (0.083) | 24.84, < 0.001a | |
| Peak velocity (mm/s) | 798.6 (36.7) | 777.8 (31.5) | 0.57, 0.465 | 0.81 |
| Peak deceleration (mm/s2) | − 9109.8 (965.0) | − 12,446.8 (1377.1) | 10.31, 0.008a |
aSignificant F tests supporting difference between hand and foot
bBF10 less than 1/3 supporting no difference between hand and foot
Comparing the effect of effector between reaching and grasping
| Transport parameter | Task effect (F(1,11), | Reaching (bonferroni corrected | Grasping (bonferroni corrected | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Time to peak velocity (%) | 9.33, 0.011a | 0.146 | < 0.001a |
| 2 | Peak velocity to peak deceleration (s) | 12.26, 0.005a | > 0.999 | 0.033a |
aSignificant F tests supporting task effect on the effect of effector, and significant post-hoc comparisons between hand and foot
Fig. 4Comparison of the prehension kinematics between the hand and the foot. A Changes in aperture size over absolute time for each effector and object size. The dashed vertical lines denote time to maximum grip aperture. B Changes in aperture size over percentage time for each effector and object size. Vertical dashed lines denote percentage time to maximum grip aperture. C Maximum grip aperture for each effector and object size. A line graph is superimposed on the bar graph to visualize the trend. D Slope between aperture size and object size for each effector over absolute and percentage time. The slope for foot began to rise much later than hand
Effect of effector and object size on prehension dependent variables in the grasping task
| Prehension parameter | Effect of effector (F(1,11), | Effect of object size (F(2,22), | Interaction (F(2,22), | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hand (mean (SE)) | Foot (mean (SE)) | Large (mean (SE)) | Medium (mean (SE)) | Small (mean (SE)) | ||
| MGA (mm) | 25.07, < 0.001a | 69.96, < 0.001a | 26.42, < 0.001a | |||
| 60.1 (2.40) | 43.0 (2.49) | 54.4 (1.80) | 51.4 (1.77) | 48.83 (1.77) | ||
| Time to MGA (s) | 44.29, < 0.001a | 7.54, 0.003a | 2.95, 0.073 | |||
| 0.55 (0.068) | 1.15 (0.068) | 0.89 (0.05) | 0.86 (0.05) | 0.81 (0.05) | ||
| Time to MGA (%) | 28.03, < 0.001a | 7.23, 0.004a | 1.10, 0.352 | |||
| 51.6 (3.66) | 72.3 (1.89) | 63.5 (2.34) | 60.7 (2.28) | 59.0 (2.36) | ||
aSignificant F tests