Role of Post-Trial Visual Feedback on Unintentional Force Drift During Isometric Finger Force Production Tasks
Author(s) -
S Balamurugan,
Dhanush Rachaveti,
Varadhan SKM
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
motor control
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.514
H-Index - 46
eISSN - 1543-2696
pISSN - 1087-1640
DOI - 10.1123/mc.2020-0031
Subject(s) - isometric exercise , visual feedback , physical medicine and rehabilitation , tonic (physiology) , psychology , reflex , control theory (sociology) , physical therapy , simulation , medicine , computer science , control (management) , artificial intelligence , neuroscience
A reduction in fingertip forces during a visually occluded isometric task is called unintentional drift. In this study, unintentional drift was studied for two conditions, with and without "epilogue." We define epilogue as the posttrial visual feedback in which the outcome of the just-concluded trial is shown before the start of the next trial. For this study, 14 healthy participants were recruited and were instructed to produce fingertip forces to match a target line at 15% maximum voluntary contraction. The results showed a significant reduction in unintentional drift in the epilogue condition. This reduction is probably due to the difference in the shift in λ, the threshold of the tonic stretch reflex, the hypothetical control variable that the central controller can set.
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