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Posture Control During Online Corrections Of Arm Movements Is Predictive, Julia Leonard, Paul Stapley
Posture Control During Online Corrections Of Arm Movements Is Predictive, Julia Leonard, Paul Stapley
Dr Paul J Stapley
The control of reaching to a target in standing involves the feed-forward programming of associated postural adjustments (a PAs) that decelerate the body and arm toward the target (Leonard et ai, 2009). However, little is known about the control of aPAs in situations where the final position of the target goal shifts after the reach movement has been initiated. We hypothesized that a predictive reprogramming of the aPA would occur prior to the adjustment of the arm movement to ensure correct execution of the reaching movement. Using a double step paradigm, we investigated the postural adjustments in standing humans exposed …
Independent Control Of Limb Force Underlies Stability During Voluntary Head Movements In Standing Humans, Paul Stapley, Alicia Hilderley, Julia Leonard
Independent Control Of Limb Force Underlies Stability During Voluntary Head Movements In Standing Humans, Paul Stapley, Alicia Hilderley, Julia Leonard
Dr Paul J Stapley
Postural stability during voluntary head movements is maintained through the integration of vestibular and neck afferent inputs. These inputs combine to accurately estimate trunk position in space, relative to a turning head. In animals, a loss of vestibular information leads to an active destabilization of balance as neck afferent information is interpreted as a movement of the trunk under a stable head (Stapley et al. 2006).
Postural Adjustments For Online Corrections Of Arm Movements In Standing Humans, Julia Leonard, Valeriya Gritsenko, Ryan Ouckama, Paul Stapley
Postural Adjustments For Online Corrections Of Arm Movements In Standing Humans, Julia Leonard, Valeriya Gritsenko, Ryan Ouckama, Paul Stapley
Dr Paul J Stapley
The aim of this study was to investigate how humans correct ongoing arm movements while standing. Specifically, we sought to understand whether the postural adjustments in the legs required for online corrections of arm movements are predictive or rely on feedback from the moving limb. To answer this question we measured online corrections in arm and leg muscles during pointing movements while standing. Nine health right-handed subjects reached with their dominant arm to a visual target in front of them and aligned with their midline. In some trials, the position of the target would switch from the central target to …