| Literature DB >> 35883179 |
Richard Hugh Moulton1, Karen Rudie2,3,4, Sean P Dukelow5,6, Stephen H Scott7,8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An individual's rapid motor skills allow them to perform many daily activities and are a hallmark of physical health. Although age and sex are both known to affect motor performance, standardized methods for assessing their impact on upper limb function are limited.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Rapid motor behaviour; Robotic assessment; Sensorimotor system
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35883179 PMCID: PMC9327262 DOI: 10.1186/s12984-022-01035-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroeng Rehabil ISSN: 1743-0003 Impact factor: 5.208
Participant demographics for OH (n = 618, 354 female and 264 male)
| Age | n | Median age | Sex | Handedness | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | Left (F/M) | Mixed (F/M) | Right (F/M) | |||
| 18–29 | 203 | 23 | 120 | 83 | 16/10 | 0/0 | 104/73 |
| 30–39 | 65 | 34 | 32 | 33 | 1/2 | 0/0 | 31/31 |
| 40–49 | 72 | 44.5 | 52 | 20 | 4/3 | 0/0 | 48/17 |
| 50–59 | 79 | 56 | 50 | 29 | 3/4 | 1/0 | 46/25 |
| 60–69 | 101 | 64 | 51 | 50 | 6/8 | 0/0 | 45/42 |
| 70–79 | 71 | 74 | 37 | 34 | 2/3 | 0/0 | 35/31 |
| 80–93 | 27 | 84 | 12 | 15 | 0/1 | 1/0 | 11/14 |
Participant demographics for OHA (n = 513, 289 female and 224 male)
| Age | n | Median age | Sex | Handedness | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | Left (F/M) | Mixed (F/M) | Right (F/M) | |||
| 18–29 | 163 | 23 | 97 | 66 | 15/7 | 0/0 | 82/59 |
| 30–39 | 56 | 34 | 31 | 25 | 1/1 | 0/0 | 30/24 |
| 40–49 | 58 | 45 | 39 | 19 | 4/3 | 0/0 | 35/16 |
| 50–59 | 65 | 56 | 39 | 26 | 1/3 | 1/0 | 37/23 |
| 60–69 | 87 | 64 | 43 | 44 | 6/8 | 0/0 | 37/36 |
| 70–79 | 65 | 74 | 33 | 32 | 2/3 | 0/0 | 31/29 |
| 80–93 | 19 | 84 | 7 | 12 | 0/1 | 1/0 | 6/11 |
Fig. 1Apparatus and task setup. A The Kinarm exoskeleton robot used for both tasks. B The virtual workspace for OH. Participants must use the green paddles to hit as many of the 300 red targets as possible. The participant’s arms are not visible during the trial; they are included for illustrative purposes only. C The virtual workspace for OHA. Participants must hit as many of the 200 targets as possible while avoiding the 100 distractors. An object’s status as a target or distractor is determined by its shape
Parameters recorded by the Kinarm and computed for the OH and OHA tasks [3]
| Parameter | Units | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Mean hand speed L/R | The participant’s mean hand speed for the left/right hand during the trial. | |
| Mean hand speed bias | A value from − 1 (all left hand) to 1 (all right hand) which describes the bias in mean hand speed between the hands. | |
| Movement area L/R | Area the participant used with the left/right hand during the trial. Determined by a convex hull that encompasses the complete hand path. | |
| Movement area bias | A value from − 1 (all left hand) to 1 (all right hand) which describes the bias in movement areas between the hands. | |
| Hand bias of hits | A value from − 1 (all left hand) to 1 (all right hand) that quantifies which hand is used more often for hitting targets. | |
| Hand selection overlap | % | The sum of the hand switches for each bin, divided by the number of targets. |
| Miss bias | cm | Where in the workspace the participant’s misses are biased. |
| Hand transition | cm | Where in the workspace the participant’s preference for using one hand over the other switches. |
| Median error | % | Percentage of the way through the task (based on number of targets, not time) where the participant has recorded half of their misses. |
| Distractor proportion | % | Number of distractors hit as a proportion of the total number of objects (targets + distractors) hit. OHA only. |
| Object processing rate | Hz | Number of objects (targets + distractors) correctly processed when 80% of the task’s objects have been created. OHA only. |
| Steady-state rate | Hz | Number of targets hit per second while the participant is overwhelmed. |
| Targets hit | n | The number of targets hit during the trial. |
| Task scores | 1 | A global measure of the participant’s performance, with 0 indicating best performance and increasing values indicating worsening performance. Specifically, the root sum of squares distance of the participant’s Z-scores and Zeta-scores compared to healthy control participants. |
Fig. 2The steady-state rate. Smoothed target creation (black) and target hit (blue) rates are shown for an illustrative participant performing an OH trial. At a certain point in the trial, the participant becomes overwhelmed by the targets being created and reaches a steady-state rate of hitting targets (red)
Fig. 3Targets hit. Histograms showing the number of targets hit by participants across all trials for A OH and B OHA. Note that there are 300 targets in OH but only 200 targets for OHA
Fig. 4No trade-off between targets and distractors. Scatter plots showing the proportion of targets hit versus the proportion of distractors avoided for OHA. The linear regression line is shown in solid red along with the 95% confidence interval in dashed red. The solid black line indicates equal trade-off between the two objectives, with perfect performance in the top right corner. The dashed black line indicates hitting objects indiscriminately, with no distinction between targets and distractors
Fig. 5Participants have different per-bin accuracies during different phases of the trial. Mean percentage of targets hit by horizontal bin across all trials for A OH and B OHA. The standard error of the mean is shown as bars for each point, but largely overlaps with the mean itself. Targets are split according to whether they were created during the participant’s individual early (blue) or overwhelmed (red) phase
Fig. 6Hits and stead-state rates correlate. Participants’ number of targets hit and steady-state rate are scatter-plotted for A OH and B OHA. Linear regression lines are shown in red
Estimated values and 95% confidence intervals of the slope parameter for linear regressions between age and the parameters listed in Table 3 for OH. Also included are p-values for the null hypothesis that a regression’s slope parameter is equal to 0
| Parameter | Slope | 95% CI | p |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean hand speed left | 0.0005 | (0.0003, 0.0007) | |
| Mean hand speed right | 0.0005 | (0.0003, 0.0007) | |
| Mean hand speed bias | (− 0.0002, 0.0002) | 0.9215 | |
| Movement area left | ( | 0.9807 | |
| Movement area right | ( | 0.4677 | |
| Movement area bias | 0.0002 | ( | 0.1994 |
| Hand bias of hits | 0.0003 | ( | 0.0106 |
| Hand selection overlap | (− 0.0002, | 0.2358 | |
| Hand transition | (− 0.0002, | 0.0622 | |
| Miss bias | 0.0002 | ( | 0.0427 |
| Median error | − 0.1058 | (− 0.1228, − 0.0888) | |
| Targets hit | − 0.7333 | (− 0.8212, − 0.6455) | |
| Steady-state rate | − 0.0099 | (− 0.0111, − 0.0087) | |
| Task score | − 0.0020 | (− 0.0041, | 0.0680 |
Estimated values and 95% confidence intervals of the slope parameter for linear regressions between age and the parameters listed in Table 3 for OHA. Also included are p-values for the null hypothesis that a regression’s slope parameter is equal to 0
| Parameter | Slope | 95% CI | p |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean hand speed left | − 0.0002 | (− 0.0004, | 0.0222 |
| Mean hand speed right | − 0.0003 | (− 0.0005, − 0.0001) | 0.0015 |
| Mean hand speed bias | − 0.0002 | (− 0.0005, 0.0001) | 0.2358 |
| Movement area left | − 0.0002 | (− 0.0003, − 0.0001) | |
| Movement area right | − 0.0002 | (− 0.0003, | 0.0003 |
| Movement area bias | 0.0001 | (− 0.0002, 0.0005) | 0.4462 |
| Hand bias of hits | − 0.0001 | (− 0.0005, 0.0002) | 0.3678 |
| Hand selection overlap | − 0.0003 | (− 0.0004, − 0.0001) | 0.0003 |
| Hand transition | (− 0.0002, | 0.2723 | |
| Miss bias | ( | 0.3061 | |
| Median error | − 0.1360 | (− 0.1558, − 0.1163) | |
| Distractor proportion | 0.1307 | (0.1112, 0.1502) | |
| Object processing rate | − 0.0100 | (− 0.0111, − 0.0089) | |
| Targets hit | − 0.6120 | (− 0.6739, − 0.5501) | |
| Steady-state rate | − 0.0077 | (− 0.0085, − 0.0069) | |
| Task score | − 0.0014 | (− 0.0038, 0.0010) | 0.2500 |
Fig. 7Age-related declines in OH and OHA. Scatter plots between participant age and parameters showing significant aging effects for A OH and B OHA. Linear regressions are shown in solid red and the regression’s 95% confidence intervals are shown in dashed red
Population differences and statistical test results for sex effects in both OH and OHA
| Parameter | OH | OHA | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| p | 95% CI | p | 95% CI | |
| Mean hand speed left | 0.01528 | (0.0020, 0.0190) | 0.0041 | (0.0032, 0.0169) |
| Mean hand speed right | 0.0367 | (0.0006, 0.0184) | 0.5264 | (− 0.0049, 0.0095) |
| Mean hand speed bias | 0.3546 | (− 0.01460, 0.0052) | 0.0015 | (− 0.0343, − 0.0082) |
| Movement area left | (0.0101, 0.0180) | 0.0002 | (0.0036, 0.0116) | |
| Movement area right | (0.0083, 0.0169) | 0.2091 | (− 0.0015, 0.0069) | |
| Movement area bias | 0.1553 | (− 0.0205, 0.0033) | 0.0007 | (− 0.0424, − 0.0114) |
| Hand bias of hits | 0.1305 | (− 0.0187, 0.0024) | 0.0202 | (− 0.0281, − 0.0024) |
| Hand selection overlap | 0.1500 | (-0.0015, 0.0097) | 0.0189 | (0.0013, 0.0147) |
| Hand transition | 0.7218 | (− 0.0032, 0.0047) | 0.1063 | (− 0.0009, 0.0092) |
| Miss bias | 0.8718 | (− 0.0064, 0.0075) | 0.7090 | (− 0.0059, 0.0087) |
| Median error | (1.169, 2.717) | 0.5847 | (− 1.195, 0.6743) | |
| Distractor proportion | – | – | 0.6504 | (− 0.6866, 1.099) |
| Object processing rate | – | – | 0.0646 | (− 0.0031, 0.1043) |
| Targets hit | (9.9753, 18.2396) | 0.0548 | (− 0.0655, 6.3569) | |
| Steady-state rate | (0.1326, 0.2461) | 0.0516 | (− 0.0003, 0.0828) | |
| Task score | 0.6760 | (− 0.0722, 0.1112) | 0.5732 | (− 0.0711, 0.1284) |
Estimates of the linear regression slopes for given parameters against age for both male and female participants. The 95% confidence interval for these estimates is reported in brackets. Z-test p-values are reported for the null hypothesis that male and female participants had the same regression slopes for age-parameter regressions
| OH | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Parameter | p | ||
| Median error | − 0.1108 (− 0.1371, − 0.0844) | − 0.1118 (− 0.1334, − 0.0903) | 0.9503 |
| Targets hit | − 0.7923 (− 0.9151, − 0.6695) | − 0.7584 (− 0.8725, − 0.6443) | 0.6908 |
| Steady-state rate | − 0.0111 (− 0.0129, − 0.0094) | − 0.0099 (− 0.0114, − 0.0084) | 0.2958 |