𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Development of human precision grip

✍ Scribed by Ann-Christin Eliasson; Hans Forssberg; Komei Ikuta; Ingmari Apel; Göran Westling; Roland Johansson


Book ID
104674407
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
876 KB
Volume
106
Category
Article
ISSN
0014-4819

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


When an object held by a precision gripis subjected to an abrupt vertical load perturbation, somatosensory input from the digits triggers an increase in grip force to restore an adequate safety margin, preventing frictional slips. In adults the response occurs after a latency of 60-80 ms. In the present study, children from 2 years old upward and adults grasped and lifted an object using a precision grip. Sudden, unpredicted increases in load force (tangential to the grip surfaces) were induced by the experimenter by dropping a small disc on to a receptacle attached to the object. The impact elicited a grip force response which in young children had a longer latency and a smaller amplitude than was seen in adults. The grip response latency gradually become shorter and its amplitude increased with increasing age, reaching adult values at 6-10 years. The muscle activity underlying the response could have several bursts. The adults showed one brisk response, appearing 40-50 ms after impact, in extrinsic and intrinsic hand muscles, while younger children also exhibited a short-latency burst, appearing about 20 ms after impact. It is suggested that the short-latency response was mediated via spinal pathways, and that these pathways are disengaged by supraspinal centers during development. In a predictable loading situation, when subjects dropped the disc themselves into the receptable using the contralateral hand, they changed strategy. Adults induced a well-timed anticipatory grip force increase prior to the impact that was scaled to the weight of the object. The youngest children did not time the force increase properly in relation to the impact. Yet, they could scale their anticipatory grip force increase with respect to the weight of the dropped disc. This suggests a well-developed capacity to use information about the weight of objects held by one hand to parameterize a programmed force output to the other hand.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Development of human precision grip
✍ H. Forssberg; H. Kinoshita; A. C. Eliasson; R. S. Johansson; G. Westling; A. M. 📂 Article 📅 1992 🏛 Springer-Verlag 🌐 English ⚖ 630 KB

The development of anticipatory control during lifts with the precision grip was examined in 100 children aged 1 to 15 years and in 15 adults. The children were instructed to lift an instrumented test object by using the precision grip between the thumb and index finger. The employed grip force, loa

Development of human precision grip
✍ A. M. Gordon; H. Forssberg; R. S. Johansson; A. C. Eliasson; G. Westling 📂 Article 📅 1992 🏛 Springer-Verlag 🌐 English ⚖ 518 KB

Recent evidence has shown that visual and haptical size information can be used by adults to estimate the weight of the object, forming the basis of the force programming during precision grip (Gordon et al. 1991a, b,). The present study examined the development of the capacity to use visual size in

Development of human precision grip
✍ H. Forssberg; A. C. Eliasson; H. Kinoshita; G. Westling; R. S. Johansson 📂 Article 📅 1995 🏛 Springer-Verlag 🌐 English ⚖ 795 KB
Development of human precision grip I: B
✍ H. Forssberg; A. C. Eliasson; H. Kinoshita; R. S. Johansson; G. Westling 📂 Article 📅 1991 🏛 Springer-Verlag 🌐 English ⚖ 644 KB

The coordination of manipulative forces was examined while children and adults repeatedly lifted a small object between the thumb and index finger. Grip force, load force (vertical lifting force), grip force rate and the vertical position of the test object were continuously measured. In adults, the