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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carducci, Jacob, Brown, Jeremy D.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.12664
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author Carducci, Jacob
Brown, Jeremy D.
author_facet Carducci, Jacob
Brown, Jeremy D.
contents Traditional approaches to measurement in upper-limb therapy have gaps that electronic sensing and recording can help fill. We highlight shortcomings in current kinematic recording devices, and we introduce a wrist sensing device that performs multimodal sensing during single-axis rotation. Our goal is to characterize normative kinesthetic perception and real-world performance as a multimodal sensory "fingerprint" that can serve as a reference point for identifying deficit in persons affected by stroke, and then as a jumping point for later neuroscientific interrogation. We present an experiment involving psychophysical measurements of passive stimuli discrimination, matching adjustment acuity, and ADL performance in 11 neurologically-intact persons. We found that passive velocity sense and active position sense of healthy controls, measured by velocity discrimination and position matching respectively, correlated in rank with each other, but other score comparisons of acuity or task performance had no statistically significant correlations. We also found that participants differed in acuity between passive and active velocity sense, which supports current understanding about muscle spindle activation being modulated by conscious motor command. The potential for our null correlation results to reveal dissociable aspects of deficit is discussed, as well as implications for future neuroscientific study with more kinematic measures and larger datasets.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2411_12664
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Identifying patterns of proprioception and target matching acuity in healthy humans
Carducci, Jacob
Brown, Jeremy D.
Robotics
Traditional approaches to measurement in upper-limb therapy have gaps that electronic sensing and recording can help fill. We highlight shortcomings in current kinematic recording devices, and we introduce a wrist sensing device that performs multimodal sensing during single-axis rotation. Our goal is to characterize normative kinesthetic perception and real-world performance as a multimodal sensory "fingerprint" that can serve as a reference point for identifying deficit in persons affected by stroke, and then as a jumping point for later neuroscientific interrogation. We present an experiment involving psychophysical measurements of passive stimuli discrimination, matching adjustment acuity, and ADL performance in 11 neurologically-intact persons. We found that passive velocity sense and active position sense of healthy controls, measured by velocity discrimination and position matching respectively, correlated in rank with each other, but other score comparisons of acuity or task performance had no statistically significant correlations. We also found that participants differed in acuity between passive and active velocity sense, which supports current understanding about muscle spindle activation being modulated by conscious motor command. The potential for our null correlation results to reveal dissociable aspects of deficit is discussed, as well as implications for future neuroscientific study with more kinematic measures and larger datasets.
title Identifying patterns of proprioception and target matching acuity in healthy humans
topic Robotics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.12664