Journal article
Proprioceptive Acuity is Enhanced During Arm Movements Compared to When the Arm is Stationary: A Study of Young and Older Adults
Neuroscience, Vol.466, pp.222-234
04/24/2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2021.04.015
PMID: 33905823
Abstract
Proprioception in old age is thought to be poorer due to degeneration of the central (CNS) and peripheral nervous systems (PNS). We tested whether community-dwelling older adults (65-83 years) make larger proprioceptive errors than young adults (18-22 years) using a natural reaching task. Subjects moved the right arm to touch the index fingertip to the stationary or moving left index fingertip. The range of locations of the target index fingertip was large, sampling the natural workspace of the human arm. The target arm was moved actively by the subject or passively by the experimenter and reaching arm movements towards the target were made under visual guidance, or with vision blocked (proprioceptive guidance). Subjects did not know the direction or speed of upcoming target hand motion in the passive conditions. Mean 3D distance errors between the right and left index finger tips were small in both groups and only slightly larger when vision was blocked than when allowed, but averaged 2-5 mm larger in older than in younger adults in moving (p = 0.002) and stationary (p = 0.07) conditions, respectively. Variable errors were small and similar in the two groups (p > 0.35). Importantly, clearly larger errors were observed for reaching to the stationary than to the moving index fingertip in both groups, demonstrating that dynamic proprioceptive information during movement permits more accurate localization of the endpoint of the moving arm. This novel finding demonstrates the importance of dynamic proprioceptive information in movement guidance and bimanual coordination.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Proprioceptive Acuity is Enhanced During Arm Movements Compared to When the Arm is Stationary: A Study of Young and Older Adults
- Creators
- Christopher R Coffman - University of IowaCharles Capaday - University of IowaWarren G Darling - University of Iowa
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Neuroscience, Vol.466, pp.222-234
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2021.04.015
- PMID
- 33905823
- ISSN
- 0306-4522
- eISSN
- 1873-7544
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 04/24/2021
- Academic Unit
- Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science; Health and Human Physiology
- Record Identifier
- 9984259656202771
Metrics
24 Record Views