» Articles » PMID: 11807573

Three-dimensional Head and Upper Arm Orientations During Kinematically Redundant Movements and at Rest

Overview
Journal Exp Brain Res
Specialty Neurology
Date 2002 Jan 25
PMID 11807573
Citations 6
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The three rotational degrees of freedom of the head and the upper arm exceed the number needed in a two-dimensional (2-D) facing or pointing task, respectively. Previous studies reported a reduction of the number of degrees of freedom from three to two, with one degree of freedom being a unique function of the other two (Donders' law). This study investigated whether three-dimensional (3-D) orientations of the head and arm are the same at rest and during movement for corresponding pointing or facing directions. Two separate experiments were performed: one focused on head orientations, the other focused on upper arm orientations. We instructed subjects to direct the nose or to point the extended arm in the direction of targets, which appeared in a quasi-random order at 2-s intervals. The head and upper arm orientations at rest were described by a 2-D surface with a scatter less than 3 or 4 degrees, respectively. Both for the arm and the head, orientations started and ended near the 2-D surface, but for a number of the target pairs, the orientations deviated from those predicted by the 2-D surface during movement in a way that was consistent and reproducible for movements between each target pair. For upper arm movements, we often found that deviations of arm orientations from the 2-D surface increased with increasing movement velocity. Such a positive correlation between deviation and movement velocity was not found for head movements. These results clearly indicate violations of Donders' law during movement and argue against several models for movement control found in the literature.

Citing Articles

Redundancy, self-motion, and motor control.

Martin V, Scholz J, Schoner G Neural Comput. 2009; 21(5):1371-414.

PMID: 19718817 PMC: 3086896. DOI: 10.1162/neco.2008.01-08-698.


Characterizing head motion in three planes during combined visual and base of support disturbances in healthy and visually sensitive subjects.

Keshner E, Dhaher Y Gait Posture. 2007; 28(1):127-34.

PMID: 18162402 PMC: 2577851. DOI: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2007.11.003.


Intrinsic joint kinematic planning. I: reassessing the Listing's law constraint in the control of three-dimensional arm movements.

Liebermann D, Biess A, Friedman J, Gielen C, Flash T Exp Brain Res. 2005; 171(2):139-54.

PMID: 16341526 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-005-0265-x.


Intrinsic joint kinematic planning. II: hand-path predictions based on a Listing's plane constraint.

Liebermann D, Biess A, Gielen C, Flash T Exp Brain Res. 2005; 171(2):155-73.

PMID: 16341525 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-005-0268-7.


Modeling 3D object manipulation: synchronous single-axis joint rotations?.

Klein Breteler M, Meulenbroek R Exp Brain Res. 2005; 168(3):395-409.

PMID: 16237523 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-005-0107-x.