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Variable and Asymmetric Range of Enslaving: Fingers Can Act Independently over Small Range of Flexion

The variability in the numerous tasks in which we use our hands is very large. However, independent movement control of individual fingers is limited. To assess the extent of finger independency during full-range finger flexion including all finger joints, we studied enslaving (movement in non-instr...

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Autores principales: van den Noort, Josien C., van Beek, Nathalie, van der Kraan, Thomas, Veeger, DirkJan H. E. J., Stegeman, Dick F., Veltink, Peter H., Maas, Huub
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5167409/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27992598
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0168636
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author van den Noort, Josien C.
van Beek, Nathalie
van der Kraan, Thomas
Veeger, DirkJan H. E. J.
Stegeman, Dick F.
Veltink, Peter H.
Maas, Huub
author_facet van den Noort, Josien C.
van Beek, Nathalie
van der Kraan, Thomas
Veeger, DirkJan H. E. J.
Stegeman, Dick F.
Veltink, Peter H.
Maas, Huub
author_sort van den Noort, Josien C.
collection PubMed
description The variability in the numerous tasks in which we use our hands is very large. However, independent movement control of individual fingers is limited. To assess the extent of finger independency during full-range finger flexion including all finger joints, we studied enslaving (movement in non-instructed fingers) and range of independent finger movement through the whole finger flexion trajectory in single and multi-finger movement tasks. Thirteen young healthy subjects performed single- and multi-finger movement tasks under two conditions: active flexion through the full range of movement with all fingers free to move and active flexion while the non-instructed finger(s) were restrained. Finger kinematics were measured using inertial sensors (PowerGlove), to assess enslaving and range of independent finger movement. Although all fingers showed enslaving movement to some extent, highest enslaving was found in adjacent fingers. Enslaving effects in ring and little finger were increased with movement of additional, non-adjacent fingers. The middle finger was the only finger affected by restriction in movement of non-instructed fingers. Each finger showed a range of independent movement before the non-instructed fingers started to move, which was largest for the index finger. The start of enslaving was asymmetrical for adjacent fingers. Little finger enslaving movement was affected by multi-finger movement. We conclude that no finger can move independently through the full range of finger flexion, although some degree of full independence is present for smaller movements. This range of independent movement is asymmetric and variable between fingers and between subjects. The presented results provide insight into the role of finger independency for different types of tasks and populations.
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spelling pubmed-51674092017-01-04 Variable and Asymmetric Range of Enslaving: Fingers Can Act Independently over Small Range of Flexion van den Noort, Josien C. van Beek, Nathalie van der Kraan, Thomas Veeger, DirkJan H. E. J. Stegeman, Dick F. Veltink, Peter H. Maas, Huub PLoS One Research Article The variability in the numerous tasks in which we use our hands is very large. However, independent movement control of individual fingers is limited. To assess the extent of finger independency during full-range finger flexion including all finger joints, we studied enslaving (movement in non-instructed fingers) and range of independent finger movement through the whole finger flexion trajectory in single and multi-finger movement tasks. Thirteen young healthy subjects performed single- and multi-finger movement tasks under two conditions: active flexion through the full range of movement with all fingers free to move and active flexion while the non-instructed finger(s) were restrained. Finger kinematics were measured using inertial sensors (PowerGlove), to assess enslaving and range of independent finger movement. Although all fingers showed enslaving movement to some extent, highest enslaving was found in adjacent fingers. Enslaving effects in ring and little finger were increased with movement of additional, non-adjacent fingers. The middle finger was the only finger affected by restriction in movement of non-instructed fingers. Each finger showed a range of independent movement before the non-instructed fingers started to move, which was largest for the index finger. The start of enslaving was asymmetrical for adjacent fingers. Little finger enslaving movement was affected by multi-finger movement. We conclude that no finger can move independently through the full range of finger flexion, although some degree of full independence is present for smaller movements. This range of independent movement is asymmetric and variable between fingers and between subjects. The presented results provide insight into the role of finger independency for different types of tasks and populations. Public Library of Science 2016-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC5167409/ /pubmed/27992598 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0168636 Text en © 2016 van den Noort et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
van den Noort, Josien C.
van Beek, Nathalie
van der Kraan, Thomas
Veeger, DirkJan H. E. J.
Stegeman, Dick F.
Veltink, Peter H.
Maas, Huub
Variable and Asymmetric Range of Enslaving: Fingers Can Act Independently over Small Range of Flexion
title Variable and Asymmetric Range of Enslaving: Fingers Can Act Independently over Small Range of Flexion
title_full Variable and Asymmetric Range of Enslaving: Fingers Can Act Independently over Small Range of Flexion
title_fullStr Variable and Asymmetric Range of Enslaving: Fingers Can Act Independently over Small Range of Flexion
title_full_unstemmed Variable and Asymmetric Range of Enslaving: Fingers Can Act Independently over Small Range of Flexion
title_short Variable and Asymmetric Range of Enslaving: Fingers Can Act Independently over Small Range of Flexion
title_sort variable and asymmetric range of enslaving: fingers can act independently over small range of flexion
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5167409/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27992598
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0168636
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