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J Neurophysiol (February 18, 2004). doi:10.1152/jn.01265.2003
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Submitted on December 29, 2003
Accepted on February 16, 2004

Muscular and Postural Synergies of the Human Hand

Erica J. Weiss and Martha Flanders*

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: fland001{at}umn.edu.

Because humans have limited ability to independently control the many joints of the hand, a wide variety of hand shapes can be characterized as a weighted combination of just two or three main patterns of covariation in joint rotations, or postural synergies. The present study sought to align muscle synergies with these main postural synergies, and to describe the form of membership of motor units in these postural/muscle synergies. Seventeen joint angles and the electromyographic (EMG) activities of several hand muscles (both intrinsic and extrinsic muscles) were recorded while human subjects held the hand statically, in 52 specific shapes (i.e., shaping the hand around 26 commonly grasped objects or forming the 26 letter shapes of a manual alphabet). Principal components analysis revealed several patterns of muscle synergy, some of which represented either coactivation of all hand muscles, or reciprocal patterns of activity (above and below average levels) in the intrinsic index finger and thumb muscles, or (to a lesser extent) in the extrinsic four-tendoned extensor and flexor muscles. Single unit and multiunit activity was generally a multimodal function of whole hand shape. This implies that motor unit activation does not align with a single synergy; instead, motor units participate in multiple muscle synergies. Thus it appears that the organization of the global pattern of hand muscle activation is highly distributed. This organization mirrors the highly fractured somatotopy of cortical hand representations, and may provide an ideal substrate for motor learning and recovery from injury.




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