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J Neurophysiol (May 25, 2005). doi:10.1152/jn.01310.2004
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Submitted on December 20, 2004
Accepted on May 21, 2005

Kinematic and dynamic synergies of human precision grip movements

Ivan V. Grinyagin1, Elena V. Biryukova1, and Marc A. Maier1*

1 Russian State Medicine University, Moscow, Russian Federation

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: Marc.Maier{at}snv.jussieu.fr.

We analyzed the adaptability of human thumb and index finger movement kinematics and dynamics to variations of precision grip aperture and movement velocity. Six subjects performed precision grip opening and closing movements under different conditions of movement velocity and movement aperture (thumb and index finger tip-to-tip distance). Angular motion of the thumb and index finger joints was recorded with a CyberGlove® and a 3-D biomechanical model was used for solving the inverse dynamics problem during precision grip movements, i.e. for calculating joint torques from experimentally obtained angular variations. The time-varying joint angles and joint torques were analyzed by principal component analysis to quantify the contributions of individual joints in kinematic and dynamic synergies. At the level of movement kinematics we found subject-specific angular contributions. However, the adaptation to large aperture, achieved by an increase of the relative contribution of the proximal joints, was subject-invariant. At the level of movement dynamics, the adaptation of thumb-index finger movements to task constraints was similar among all subjects and required i) the linear scaling of joint torques, ii) the synchronization of joint torques under high velocity conditions, and iii) a flexible redistribution of joint torques between the proximal joint of the thumb and that of the index finger. This work represents one of the first attempts at calculating the joint torques during human precision grip movements and indicates that the dynamic synergies seem to be remarkably simple compared to the synergies found for movement kinematics.




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W. Zhang, J. P. Scholz, V. M. Zatsiorsky, and M. L. Latash
What Do Synergies Do? Effects of Secondary Constraints on Multidigit Synergies in Accurate Force-Production Tasks
J Neurophysiol, February 1, 2008; 99(2): 500 - 513.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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