Mind Your Grip: Even Usual Dexterous Manipulation Requires High Level Cognition

نویسندگان

  • Erwan Guillery
  • André Mouraux
  • Jean-Louis Thonnard
  • Valéry Legrain
چکیده

Simultaneous execution of cognitive and sensorimotor tasks is critical in daily life. Here, we examined whether dexterous manipulation, a highly habitual and seemingly automatic behavior, involves high order cognitive functions. Specifically, we explored the impact of reducing available cognitive resources on the performance of a precision grip-lift task in healthy participants of three age groups (18-30, 30-60 and 60-75 years). Participants performed a motor task in isolation (M), in combination with a low-load cognitive task (M + L), and in combination with a high-load cognitive task (M + H). The motor task consisted in grasping, lifting and holding an apparatus instrumented with force sensors to monitor motor task performance. In the cognitive task, a list of letters was shown briefly before the motor task. After completing the motor task, one letter of the list was shown, and participants reported the following letter of the list. In M + L, letters in the list followed the alphabetical order. In M + H, letters were presented in random order. Performing the high-load task thus required maintaining information in working memory. Temporal and dynamic parameters of grip and lift forces were compared across conditions. During the cognitive tasks, there was a significant alteration of movement initiation and a significant increase of grip force (GF) throughout the grip-lift task. There was no interaction with "age". Our results demonstrate that planning and the on-line control of dexterous manipulation is not an automatic behavior and, instead, that it interacts with high-level cognitive processes such as those involved in working memory.

برای دانلود رایگان متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

منابع مشابه

Human brain activity in the control of fine static precision grip forces: an fMRI study.

Dexterous manipulation of delicate objects requires exquisite control of fingertip forces. We have used functional magnetic resonance imaging to identify brain regions involved in the skillful scaling of these forces when normal human subjects (n = 8) held with precision grip a small object (weight 200 g) in the dominant right hand. In one condition, they used their normal, automatically scaled...

متن کامل

Controlling instabilities in manipulation requires specific cortical-striatal-cerebellar networks.

Dexterous manipulation requires both strength, the ability to produce fingertip forces of a specific magnitude, and dexterity, the ability to dynamically regulate the magnitude and direction of fingertip force vectors and finger motions. Although cortical activity in fronto-parietal networks has been established for stable grip and pinch forces, the cortical regulation in the dexterous control ...

متن کامل

Effects of Carpal Tunnel Syndrome on Dexterous Manipulation Are Grip Type-Dependent

Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) impairs sensation of a subset of digits. Although the effects of CTS on manipulation performed with CTS-affected digits have been studied using precision grip tasks, the extent to which CTS affects multi-digit force coordination has only recently been studied. Whole-hand manipulation studies have shown that CTS patients retain the ability to modulate multi-digit for...

متن کامل

Bio-inspired Control of Dexterous Manipulation

Robots successfully manipulate objects in controlled environments. However, they fail in unknown environments. Few years old children lift and manipulate unfamiliar objects more dexterously than today’s robots. Therefore, roboticists are looking for inspiration on neurophysiological studies to improve their robotics control models. We present an artificial intelligence control model for dextero...

متن کامل

1 2 3 4 5 Controlling instabilities in manipulation requires specific cortical - striatal - cerebellar 6 networks 7 8 9

44 Dexterous manipulation requires both “strength”, the ability to produce fingertip 45 forces of a specific magnitude; and “dexterity”, the ability to dynamically regulate the 46 magnitude and direction of fingertip force vectors and finger motions. While cortical 47 activity in fronto-parietal networks has been established for stable grip and pinch forces, 48 the cortical regulation in the de...

متن کامل

ذخیره در منابع من


  با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید

عنوان ژورنال:

دوره 11  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2017