NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
Haptic stabilization of posture: changes in arm proprioception and cutaneous feedback for different arm orientationsPostural sway during quiet stance is attenuated by actively maintained contact of the index finger with a stationary surface, even if the level of applied force (<1 N) cannot provide mechanical stabilization. In this situation, changes in force level at the fingertip lead changes in center of foot pressure by approximately 250 ms. These and related findings indicate that stimulation of the fingertip combined with proprioceptive information about the hand and arm can serve as an active sensor of body position relative to the point of contact. A geometric analysis of the relationship between hand and torso displacement during body sway led to the prediction that arm and hand proprioceptive and finger somatosensory information about body sway would be maximized with finger contact in the plane of body sway. Therefore, the most postural stabilization should be possible with such contact. To test this analysis, subjects touched a laterally versus anteriorly placed surface while in each of two stances: the heel-to-toe tandem Romberg stance that reduces medial-lateral stability and the heel-to-heel, toes-outward, knees-bent, "duck stance" that reduces fore-aft stability. Postural sway was always least with finger contact in the unstable plane: for the tandem stance, lateral fingertip contact was significantly more effective than frontal contact, and, for the duck stance, frontal contact was more effective than lateral fingertip contact. Force changes at the fingertip led changes in center of pressure of the feet by approximately 250 ms for both fingertip contact locations for both test stances. These results support the geometric analysis, which showed that 1) arm joint angles change by the largest amount when fingertip contact is maintained in the plane of greatest sway, and 2) the somatosensory cues at the fingertip provide both direction and amplitude information about sway when the finger is contacting a surface in the unstable plane.
Document ID
20040141737
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Rabin, E.
(Brandeis University Waltham, Massachusetts 02454, United States)
Bortolami, S. B.
DiZio, P.
Lackner, J. R.
Date Acquired
August 22, 2013
Publication Date
December 1, 1999
Publication Information
Publication: Journal of neurophysiology
Volume: 82
Issue: 6
ISSN: 0022-3077
Subject Category
Life Sciences (General)
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
Non-NASA Center
NASA Discipline Space Human Factors
NASA Program Biomedical Research and Countermeasures
Clinical Trial

Available Downloads

There are no available downloads for this record.
No Preview Available