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J Neurophysiol (February 1, 2003). 10.1152/jn.00249.2002
Submitted on Submitted 5 April 2002; accepted in final form 16 October 2002
1Unité de Réadaptation et de Médecine Physique, Université Catholique de Louvain, B-1200 Brussels, Belgium; and 2Centre de Recherche en Sciences Neurologiques, Department de Physiologie, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec H3T 1J4, Canada
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ABSTRACT |
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Augurelle, Anne-Sophie, Allan M. Smith, Thierry Lejeune, and Jean-Louis Thonnard. Importance of Cutaneous Feedback in Maintaining a Secure Grip During Manipulation of Hand-Held Objects. J. Neurophysiol. 89: 665-671, 2003. Previous research has shown that grip and load forces are modulated simultaneously during manipulation of a hand-held object. This close temporal coupling suggested that both forces are controlled by an internal model within the CNS that predicts the changes in tangential force on the fingers. The objective of the present study was to examine how the internal model would compensate for the loss of cutaneous sensation through local anesthesia of the index and thumb. Ten healthy adult subjects (5 men and 5 women aged 20-57 yr) were asked to grasp, lift, and hold stationary, a 250 g object for 20 s. Next, the subjects were asked to perform vertical oscillatory movements over a distance of 20 cm at a rate of 1.0 Hz for 30 s. Eleven trials were performed with intact sensation, and 11 trials after a local ring-block anesthesia of the index and thumb with bupivacain (5 mg/ml). During static holding, loss of cutaneous sensation produced a significant increase in the safety margin. However, the grip force declined significantly over the 20-s static hold period. During oscillatory arm movements, grip and load forces were continuously modulated together in a predictive manner as suggested by Flanagan and Wing. Again, the grip force declined over the 30-s movement, and 7/10 subjects dropped the object at least once. With intact sensation, the object was never dropped; but with the fingers anesthetized, it was dropped on 36% of the trials, and a significant slip occurred on a further 12%. The mean correlation between the grip and load forces for all subjects deteriorated from 0.71 with intact sensation to 0.48 after digital anesthesia. However, a cross-correlation calculated between the grip and load forces indicated that the phase lag was approximately zero both with and without digital anesthesia. Taken together, the data from the present study suggest that cutaneous afferents are required for setting and maintaining the background level of the grip force in addition to their phasic slip-detection function and their role in adapting the grip force/load force ratio to the friction on initial contact with an object. Finally, at a more theoretical level, they correct and maintain an internal model of the physical properties of hand-held objects.
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INTRODUCTION |
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When moving a hand-held object,
the grip force is automatically modulated in parallel with fluctuations
in the load force that depend on the weight and the acceleration of the
object (Flanagan and Wing 1995
). Accidental slips rarely
occur because the grip force exceeds the minimal force required to
prevent slip (the "slip force") by a safety margin determined by
the skin-object friction (Johansson and Westling 1984
).
The temporal cross-correlation between the two forces is high and the
peak occurs at time lags ranging from -10 to +15 ms (Flanagan
and Wing 1995
). Given the delay associated with cutaneously
triggered reflexes (Collins et al. 1999
;
Johansson and Westling 1987
, 1988
), it is unlikely that
the CNS could rely on sensory feedback alone to adequately adjust the
grip forces when loads vary rapidly. This suggests that the CNS is able
to program the grip forces in anticipation of the tangential forces
arising from self-produced movements of objects with predictable
physical properties of friction and inertia (Flanagan and Wing
1993
). The CNS would acquire patterns of neural activity,
called internal models, that are able to simulate and anticipate the
dynamic behavior of the arm and of hand-held objects from prior
experience (Jordan and Wolpert 1999
). In this way, the
consequences of a future arm trajectory on the LF acting on the object
could be predicted, and the grip force necessary to prevent slip could
be calculated in a feedforward manner (Johansson and Westling
1988
). However, this theorizing does not explicitly state that
tactile feedback is unnecessary for reliable and secure object
manipulation. According to Johansson and Cole (1994)
,
cutaneous stimuli are used intermittently as discrete event
sensory-driven error signals. The mechanoreceptors of the glabrous skin
provide rapid and accurate information about discrete mechanical events like the changes in shear force or slip on the skin (Johansson and Westling 1987
). These events then trigger compensatory grip force responses maintaining the GF-LF ratio above the critical slip
point and revising the internal models that support the anticipatory control. Even after digital anesthesia, Johansson and Westling (1984)
showed that the GFs and LFs were controlled in parallel during the different phases of a lifting task. However, the GF-LF ratio
was no longer appropriately adjusted to the skin-surface friction, and
the initiation of lifting (i.e., the loading phase) was delayed.
Moreover, the grip force adjustments in response to accidental slips
and the grip force responses to unpredictable loads were delayed,
attenuated, or totally abolished after anesthetic block
(Johansson et al. 1992
). During point-to-point arm
movements with anesthetized fingers, the grip force was significantly
increased but was still modulated in parallel with the LF changes due
to both arm acceleration and changes in movement direction with respect to gravity (Nowak et al. 2001
, 2002
).
The objective of the present study was to determine the respective contribution of feedforward and feedback processes during the manipulation of mechanically predictable loads. For this purpose, the GF-LF coupling during cyclic arm movements were examined while tactile feedback was suppressed by locally anesthetizing the thumb and index finger.
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METHODS |
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Subjects and experimental procedures
Ten healthy, right-handed subjects (5 men, 5 women aged 20-57 yr) gave their informed written consent to participate in this study. The experimental procedures were approved by the ethics committee of the Université catholique de Louvain.
The GF-LF coupling was examined during cyclic vertical arm movements
with a hand-held 250 g load. The instrumented object (164 mm high)
was held with a precision grip applied on two parallel brass disks
(Fig. 1A). The force sensors
registered grip forces
100 N with a force resolution of 0.0244 N/bit.
The strain gauges were connected to a single Wheatstone bridge, which
allowed the vertical position of the center of pressure generated by
each finger to be estimated. When the grip force was applied midway between the 40-mm separating strain gauges A and B, the reaction forces, FRA and FRB,
recorded by each gauge were identical and equal to grip force (GF)/2.
As the center of pressure was displaced vertically by a distance
Z from the center of the grip surface toward the strain
gauge A, the reaction force, FRA, increased in
proportion to Z, whereas FRB decreased
by a similar amount (Fig. 1B). The vertical position of the
center of pressure, Z, was calculated as
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An accelerometer mounted on the top of the object recorded the
acceleration along its vertical axis
(av in Fig. 1A). The
mass-spring accelerometer was oil damped and had a flat frequency
response from 0 to 300 Hz (Entran Devices Model EGC-240-5D). The
accelerometer amplifier was low-pass filtered with a
3-dB cutoff
frequency of 16 kHz to eliminate possible high-frequency interference
from nearby computer equipment. The vertical LF resulting from the gravitational and the acceleration-dependent inertial force was calculated as the product of the mass and
av, which is the sum of the
gravitational and object accelerations.
The subject was seated in a chair with the shoulder slightly abducted, and the hand resting on a horizontal surface. At a signal from the experimenter, the subject lifted the object 20 cm high between two parallel elastic bands and held it stationary for 20 s (the "static phase") with the elbow flexed at ~90° (see Fig. 1). The subject was then instructed to move the object up and down for 30 s with an approximate frequency of 1.0 Hz aided by a metronome (the "dynamic phase"). The movement was constrained within the two parallel rubber bands ~20 cm apart (Fig. 1A). The upper limb displacement was freely performed using both shoulder and elbow movements. Eleven trials were performed before and after digital anesthesia of the thumb and index finger.
The skin-object coefficient of static friction was measured for each
subject before and after the 11 trials in a series of five
lift-and-drop maneuvers in which the subject lifted and held the
instrument stationary, then gradually released the grip until the
object slipped due to gravity. The coefficient of friction was
calculated as half the LF/GF ratio at slip onset as detected on the
unfiltered acceleration signal (Johansson and Westling 1984
). As the coefficients of friction were not significantly different before and after the 11 trials (paired t-test:
P > 0.05), all measurements of friction were averaged,
and the mean value was used as the estimated coefficient of friction
for each subject in each sensory condition. By assuming that the
coefficient of friction remained constant regardless of the LF
fluctuations during the movement and that the LF was evenly partitioned
between the two grasp surfaces, a theoretical slip force could be
calculated as half the ratio between the LF and the friction
coefficient. The safety margin was defined as the difference between
the employed GF/LF ratio and the slip force/LF ratio (slip ratio). The
object slipped between the fingers when the GF/LF ratio was inferior to
the slip ratio. Cutaneous anesthesia is known to reduce sweating and
consequently reduce the adhesion of the skin to an object surface
(Moberg 1962
). To compensate for this effect, talc was applied to the pulp of the index and thumb to reduce the difference between the skin-metal coefficient of friction before and after digital anesthesia.
The digital nerves at the base of the index finger and thumb were
blocked by injections of ~1 ml bupivacain (5 mg/ml) to achieve a
ring-block anesthesia of the entire first two digits. Clinical anesthesia was obtained when all sensations were abolished as indicated
by complete insensitivity to skin contact with the Semmes Weinstein
monofilaments (Lafayette Instrument) (Bell-Krotoski 1990
). In addition, the maximal voluntary pinch force between the thumb and index finger (MVC) was measured with a B&L pinch gauge
according to the procedure described by Mathiowetz et al. (1985)
before and during digital anesthesia.
Data processing and analysis
The signals from the strain gauges and accelerometer were digitized on-line at 200 Hz with a 12-bit A/D converter and stored on a laboratory computer. After digitization, the signals were low-pass filtered with a fourth-order, zero phase-lag Butterworth filter with a cut-off frequency of 15 Hz. The static and the dynamic phases were analyzed separately. The static phase started after the object had been lifted and when the vertical acceleration returned to zero (t0). It ended ~20 s later (t1) when movement was detected by the accelerometer. The dynamic phase was delimited between the first (t2) and the last (t3) peak in vertical LF. The GF, the LF, the GF/LF ratio as well as the percentage of maximal pinch force (%MVC) were measured at t0, t1, t2, and t3. The vertical displacement of the centers of finger pressure was displayed throughout the task progression and calculated at each of four critical times. A cross-correlation between the GF and the LF series during the dynamic phase was calculated for each trial to determine the phase lag (ms) at which the maximal correlation (r) between the two series was obtained. A negative time lag indicated that the correlation was maximal when the LF change preceded the change in GF.
Statistical analysis
Paired t-test based on the mean values obtained from each subject were used to test the effects of digital anesthesia on the dynamics of prehension and on the maximal pinch force and to compare the beginning and the end of the static and dynamic phases with and without digital anesthesia.
Fisher's transformation of r into a Z score was performed to compare the maximal correlation coefficients between the GF and LF series obtained with the cross-correlation procedure before and after the anesthesia.
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RESULTS |
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Maximal voluntary pinch force
Before digital anesthesia, the maximal voluntary pinch force
was comparable to the normative values obtained for a similar age and
gender-matched population (Mathiowetz et al. 1985
)
(Table 1). Paired t-test based
on values obtained before and after digital anesthesia on the same
individuals showed a significant reduction of the maximal voluntary
pinch force (t = 6.854; P < 0.001)
that was on average 26.5 ± 9.6% (mean ± SD).
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GF-LF coupling with intact sensation
A typical trial of the GF-LF coupling before digital anesthesia is displayed in Fig. 2A. During the static phase (t0-t1), the LF was equal to the object weight (250 g), and the GF/LF ratio was always maintained above the slip ratio preserving a nearly constant safety margin.
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During the dynamic phase (t2-t3), the GF was modulated in phase with the LF fluctuations generated by the accelerations of the arm during the oscillatory movements. Cross-correlation between the GF and LF series was performed on each trial. The maximal correlation (r) between the two forces was on average 0.75 ± 0.13 for the 10 subjects and occurred at a mean time lag of -7 ± 21 ms.
During the cyclic movements, the GF/LF ratio remained well above the slip ratio although it fluctuated during the cyclic movements. The force ratio was minimal and highly reproducible when the LF was at a maximum at the bottom of the trajectory. The force ratios at these times were similar to the ratios observed at the end of the static phase.
Moreover, with digital sensation intact the mean center of pressure of the two fingers was centered on the middle of the grip surface throughout the entire movement sequence. The vertical position of the centers of pressure tended to oscillate slightly (<1.0 mm) during the cyclic movement because of the skin rolling with the tangential forces.
The pooled results obtained for the 10 subjects with intact sensation are presented in Figs. 3A and Fig. 4A during the static and the dynamic phases, respectively. Over the 20 s of the static phase, the GF/LF ratio tended to decrease slowly from on average 4.07 ± 1.28 at time 0 (t0) to 2.89 ± 0.76 at time one (t1) (t = 4.669; P = 0.001). At the start of the dynamic phase (t2), the minimum GF/LF ratio occurring at the first LF peak was similar to the force ratio measured at the end of the static phase (t1). Over the 30-s period of cyclic movements, the GF-LF ratio continued to decrease, but only slightly from 2.77 ± 0.64 at time two (t2) to 2.42 ± 0.62 at time 3 (t3) (t = 4.273; P = 0.002). The force ratios were always maintained above the critical slip ratio (1.5 ± 0.39), and object slip never occurred. During the entire task, the fingers remained well centered on the grasping surface.
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GF-LF coupling with digital anesthesia
Despite the application of talc to the fingertips, a significant decrease of the skin-brass coefficient of friction was observed after digital anesthesia (t = 2.736; P = 0.023). Coated with talc, the brass surface had a mean coefficient of friction against the skin of ~0.36 ± 0.11 before and ~0.25 ± 0.04 after anesthesia. The critical slip ratio increased in turn from 1.5 ± 0.39 before to 2.08 ± 0.31 after anesthesia.
Static phase
The effects of digital anesthesia on the grip-load coupling during the static phase is presented in Fig. 2B between t0 and t1 and in Fig. 3B. The absence of cutaneous feedback produced a significant increase in the GF/LF ratio both at the start (t = -5.961; P < 0.001) and the end (t = -4.086; P < 0.003) of the static phase generating at both times a safety margin that was, on average, 50% greater than with intact sensation. The mean percentage of maximum pinch force (MVC) used to lift the 250-g object significantly increased from 12.63 ± 5.95% with intact cutaneous sensation to 27.06 ± 12.24% after digital anesthesia. Interestingly, the subjects did not maintain this higher level of GF. The decrease in GF during the static phase was on average -2 ± 0.6%/s after digital anesthesia; this was significantly steeper than the -1.5 ± 0.8%/s decrease observed with cutaneous sensation intact (t = 3.112; P = 0.012). Figure 3B also shows that the centers of fingertip pressure were correctly located near the middle of the grasping surfaces (<1 mm) during the whole static phase.
Dynamic phase
Although none of the subjects dropped the object prior to digital
anesthesia, 7/10 subjects dropped the object at least once with the
fingers anesthetized. The slips resulting in dropping the object
occurred randomly without evidence of improved performance over the
course of the 11 trials. No significant correlation (r =
0.37; P = 0.29; n = 10) was
observed between the maximum voluntary pinch force and the occurrence
of slip.
During the dynamic phase, three different GF-LF responses (hold, slip and catch, slip and drop) were observed after digital anesthesia. Figure 2B illustrates examples of each of the three responses observed in a single subject after digital anesthesia. In the hold situation, the instrumented object was held without significant slip for the required 30-s period of the oscillatory task. In the slip-and-catch situation, a significant slip of the object occurred at a peak of LF at the bottom of the trajectory but the slip was arrested in time. The slip event in the slip-and-catch trial illustrated in Fig. 2B is shown on an expanded time scale in Fig. 5. The GF modulation progressively decreased until the force ratio fell below the critical slip ratio (Fig. 5, a), and the center of pressure of the two fingers simultaneously moved up on the grip surface. The force ratio was restored a few milliseconds later, quickly enough to catch the falling object at a higher position on the grip surface (Fig. 5, b). Actually, during this period, the unloading phase of the cyclic movement started and as the LF decreased the GF became sufficient to restrain the object again. Once the GF/LF ratio was restored, the GF abruptly increased but was still modulated in phase with the LF fluctuations. Indeed, a slight decrease in GF is observed in phase with the subsequent minimum LF (Fig. 5, c). In the slip-and-drop situation (Fig. 2B), the object slipped from the fingers during the dynamic phase because of an irrecoverable drop in the force ratio to a point below the critical slip ratio.
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The GF was still modulated in parallel with the LF fluctuations during
the dynamic phase, but the mean level of GF could not be maintained
constant and was frequently insufficient to prevent slip. The maximum
correlation (r) between the GF and LF series declined on
average for all subjects from 0.75 ± 0.13 before to 0.48 ± 0.2 after anesthesia (Fisher's transformation of r into z scores: z = +3.29; P = 0.0006). In contrast, the cross-correlation analysis showed that the GF
remained well in phase with the LF with a mean time lag of only
2.0 ± 44 ms, which was not significantly different from the
7.0 ± 21ms lag, observed with intact cutaneous sensation
(t =
1.099; P = 0.3).
The results obtained from all trials performed by the 10 subjects during the dynamic phase are presented in Fig. 4B. The GF/LF ratio declined rapidly throughout the dynamic phase without cutaneous feedback whatever type of GF response occurred. This rapid decline of the GF/LF ratio associated with the increased slip ratio resulted in a significant slip on 48% of the trials. On 36% of all the trials (i.e., the slip and drop), the object irretrievably slipped from the grasp after a mean latency of ~10 s (10.6 ± 6.8 s). The centers of finger pressure at the end of the dynamic phase (t3) tracked the slip of the fingers on the grip surface before the object fell (Fig. 4B, slip and drop). On 12% of all trials (slip and catch), the centers of finger pressure started to move up slowly (1.33 ± 0.75 mm from t2 to t3), then suddenly slipped on the grasp surfaces for a few milliseconds (0.62 ± 0.49 mm from t3 to t4) before stabilizing at a higher position. Note that the two fingers moved simultaneously and that their vertical displacement was equivalent (t = -1.358, P > 0.05). The GF/LF ratio was restored (t4) on average 160 ± 40 ms after the slip (t3) at a level similar to that used at the start of the dynamic phase (t2). The GF/LF ratio decreased continuously until the end of the dynamic phase (t5). Finally, on 52% of the trials (Fig. 4B, hold), the subjects succeeded in maintaining an adequate grip on the object by exerting a significantly greater GF at the start of the dynamic phase, compared with the trials where significant slip occurred (F = 3.53; P = 0.035). Although the object was held during the entire trial, a slow and progressive slip of the centers of pressure was observed throughout the 30 s of the oscillatory phase (1.05 ± 0.78 mm), suggesting that localized slips occurred more or less continuously in various parts of the contact area.
On average, all the subjects increased their GF to 24.92 ± 10.87% of their MVC at the start of the dynamic phase after digital anesthesia. The occurrence of slip seemed to depend partly on the GF
exerted at the start of the dynamic phase but also on the rate at which
the GF decreased. With intact tactile sensation, the GF decreased over
time at a mean rate of
0.43 ± 0.64%/s, whereas with the
fingers anesthetized, the average decrease over time was 1.10 ± 0.52%/s in the hold,
2.35 ± 1.23%/s in the slip-and-catch, and
4.90 ± 6.42%/s in the slip-and-drop trials, respectively. A significant correlation of 0.77 (P < 0.01) existed
between the subject's maximal voluntary GF and the rate of GF decrease
during anesthesia.
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DISCUSSION |
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GF-LF coupling with intact sensation
With normal tactile sensation, the performance of our
subjects was similar to that described previously in the literature (Flanagan and Tresilian 1994
; Flanagan and Wing
1995
). The strong peak correlation found between the LFs and
GFs and the very brief time lag between the force functions during the
oscillatory movements support the observation that the GF was modulated
both in phase and in magnitude with the LF. The GF/LF ratio was
adjusted to the skin-surface friction and its minimum during the
movement cycles was always maintained slightly above the slip ratio.
The force ratio was maximum at each minimum of the LF because subjects did not release their grip as much as would be allowed to maintain the
safety margin constant.
GF-LF coupling after digital anesthesia
In a similar study, Nowak et al. (2001)
observed
that the precise anticipatory temporal coupling between GFs and LFs was
not impaired under anesthesia but that a higher safety margin was used
during the entire movement so that the object was never dropped. In
their experiment, the duration of each trial (6-10 s) was probably too
short to allow the appearance of slip and the short breaks (200-300
ms) introduced between each single up-and-down movement enabled the
subjects to reinstate the safety margin.
In agreement with the study of Nowak et al.
(2001)
, we observed that, the precise temporal coupling between
GF and LF was preserved in the absence of cutaneous feedback; the time
lags between the two forces being similar to those measured before anesthesia. The fact that the GF never lagged behind the LF by >40 ms
suggests the existence of a predictive temporal modulation of GF and LF
that is centrally mediated and less influenced by sensory-driven
feedback control. There is increasing evidence in the literature that
this predictive mechanism could be derived from internal models of limb
mechanics, object properties and task constraints (for review,
Flanagan and Johansson 2002
). This feedforward control
strategy is used in a variety of tasks engaging objects with different
weights, shapes, or textures (Jenmalm and Johansson
1997
; Johansson and Westling 1984
, 1988
)
manipulated with a variety of grips (two or three fingered, unimanual,
or bimanual, etc.) whatever the mode of transport (Flanagan and
Tresilian 1994
, Flanagan et al. 1999
). Moreover,
the predictive GF is also observed when the load conditions are changed
(inertial viscous, elastic) (Flanagan and Wing 1997
) or
when tangential torques are generated (Goodwin et al.
1998
, Johansson et al. 1999
).
Cutaneous sensation is essential to adjust the GF level
Our results show that cutaneous afferents are important for
maintaining GF/LF ratio, i.e., for maintenance of both the background GF and the modulation of the GF with the cyclic load. Actually, in
~50% of the trials performed during digital anesthesia, the object
slipped because the GF/LF ratio was not maintained above the slip
ratio. There was no correlation between the percentage of slip and the
maximum voluntary pinch force across subjects. Moreover, the slips
occurred at random in the series, and the GF applied to the object was
significantly below the maximum voluntary pinch forces. It seems thus
unlikely that muscle weakness or fatigue could explain the GF
decreases, which led to slip. Other investigators also noted a
reduction in force generation after blocking cutaneous afferents.
Rossini et al. (1996)
found decreased excitability in
the first dorsal interosseous after digital anesthesia, and a similar
reduction in jaw closing force was reported by Lund and Lamarre
(1973)
after anesthetizing periodontal pressure receptors. These observations suggest that in certain cases pressure receptors exert positive feedback on the CNS.
The most probable explanation of the inability to scale the
safety margin adequately with anesthetized fingers would be that the
cutaneous feedback is necessary to provide the actual state of the
system and update the preprogrammed motor commands. As there are
unavoidable disturbances acting on the motor system that are not
anticipated by the internal model, the actual sensory information
provided by the finger sensors is necessary to ascertain the actual
shear or LF and to correct the GF to maintain a secure grasp. This can
be related to the "discrete sensory event driven control policy"
previously proposed by Johansson and Cole (1994)
for
control of grasp stability in manipulation. Without cutaneous feedback,
the internal models underlying anticipatory control mechanisms are no
longer updated. As a result the prediction of the future LF is less
accurate, and there is an accumulating error in adjusting the balance
between the GF and LF for grasp stability. This theoretical concept is
in accordance with the observations based on human nerve recordings
that suggest that cutaneous signals are necessary for maintaining an
adequate safety margin when holding an object for a long time
(Johansson and Westling 1987
). Under anesthesia, the GF
correction did not occur, and the object slipped between the fingers.
In some cases, the force ratio was restored before the object fell. It
is possible that on some trials the object slipped and tilted causing
it to bind between the fingers (Edin et al. 1992
;
Johansson and Westling 1987
). However, the vertical
displacement of the fingers on the grasp surfaces occurred at the same
time with the same force under each finger, suggesting that the object
did not tilt significantly. More likely, the force ratio was
re-established because in these few trials the object slipped just at
an unloading phase of the cyclic movement and the GF became sufficient
again to overcome the LF. It was also obvious that these slip events
were followed by an increase of the GF. It could be that sensation from
more proximal areas (e.g., Pacinian-like units in the palm or
proprioceptive cues from skin stretch of the dorsal hand) or visual
feedback could have registered the slip in absence of cutaneous
afferent (Cole and Abbs 1988
; Häger-Ross
and Johansson 1996
; Johansson et al. 1992
).
However, the GF response latencies triggered by nondigital afferents
have a longer and more variable latency than with intact sensation (Häger-Ross and Johansson 1996
). We observed a
response latency of ~160 ms to slips with the fingers anesthetized;
this is consistent with this interpretation. This longer latency
probably explains why the subjects failed to catch the object when the
slip occurred during the loading phase of the cyclic movement in the
slip and drop trials. The role of visual feedback was thought to be
insignificant because of the rapidity of the cyclic movements and the
small amplitude of the finger displacement corresponding to the breadth of a few papillary ridges of the skin. When afferent information from
all sources is available, the CNS preferentially uses tactile signals
for object manipulation. However, when cutaneous feedback is lost, it
may switch to alternative sources of afferent information (Collins et al. 1999
).
In conclusion, the present study re-emphasizes the critical role of cutaneous afferents in object manipulation. In addition to their role in adapting the GF/LF ratio to the friction on initial contact with an object and their phasic slip-detection function, the cutaneous afferents are required for setting and sustaining the background level of the GF. Finally, at a more theoretical level, they correct and maintain an internal model of the physical properties of hand-held objects.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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The technical assistance of R. Lemaire for the design of the instrumental grip object is gratefully acknowledged. The authors are grateful to Dr. Elaine Chapman for reviewing an earlier version of the manuscript.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Address for reprint requests: J-L. Thonnard, Unité de Réadaptation et de Médecine Physique, Université Catholique de Louvain, 53 Avenue Mounier, Tour Pasteur (5375), B-1200 Brussels, Belgium (E-mail: Thonnard{at}read.ucl.ac.be).
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REFERENCES |
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