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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 6 December 2001, pp. 2690-2702
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Physiology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario N6A 5C1, Canada
Timmann, D.,
R. Citron,
S. Watts, and
J. Hore.
Increased Variability in Finger Position Occurs Throughout
Overarm Throws Made by Cerebellar and Unskilled Subjects. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 2690-2702, 2001. We
investigated the ability of cerebellar patients and unskilled subjects
to control finger grip position and the amplitude of finger opening
during a multijoint overarm throw. This situation is of interest
because the appropriate finger control requires predicting the
magnitude of back forces from the ball on the finger throughout the
throw and generating the appropriate level and rate of change of finger
flexor torque to oppose the back force. Cerebellar patients, matched
controls, and unskilled subjects threw tennis balls and tennis-sized
balls of different weights. In all cases angular positions of five arm
segments in three dimension were recorded at 1,000 Hz with the
search-coil technique as subjects threw from a seated position. When
the hand was stationary, cerebellar patients showed a normal ability to
grip the ball and open the fingers and drop the ball. In contrast, in
overarm throws where a back force occurred on the fingers, cerebellar
patients showed an abnormally large variability in amplitude of the
change in finger position when gripping, in amplitude of finger
opening, and in amplitude of the change in finger position 10 ms after ball release. This was not due to more trial-to-trial variation in
throwing speed. When throwing balls of increasing weights, both
controls and cerebellar patients had increasing finger flexions after
ball release that indicated that, on average, both scaled finger force
in proportion to ball weight during the throw. Unlike skilled controls,
cerebellar patients showed a small (<20°) increase in the amplitude
of finger opening with balls of increasing weight. However, neither the
increase in variability of finger position nor the increase in finger
amplitude with balls of increasing weight were unique cerebellar signs
because both were observed to various degrees in unskilled throwers. It
is concluded that in the absence of either normal cerebellar function
or skill, the central neural activity that controls finger opening in
throwing can increase finger flexor force to oppose an increase in back force from heavier balls and can open the fingers but cannot control finger force or finger opening precisely and consistently from throw to
throw. These results fit with the idea that cerebellar disorders are
greater in multijoint than single-joint movements because control of
force is more complicated. They are also consistent with the hypothesis
that the cerebellum produces skill in movement by reducing variability
in the timing and force of muscle contractions.
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