6533b862fe1ef96bd12c764e
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Muscle effort is best minimized by the right-dominant arm in the gravity field
Mourey FJérémie GaveauCharalambos PapaxanthisG. PoirierLebigre Msubject
Posterior deltoidmedicine.medical_specialtyPhysiologyComputer scienceMovement (music)General NeuroscienceMovementMusclesKinematicsFunctional LateralityBiomechanical PhenomenaPhysical medicine and rehabilitationGravitational fieldMotor systemmedicineHumansGravity effectRIGHT DOMINANTPsychomotor PerformanceGravitationdescription
AbstractThe central nervous system (CNS) is thought to develop motor strategies that minimize various hidden criteria, such as end-point variance or effort. A large body of literature suggests that the dominant arm is specialized for such open-loop optimization-like processes whilst the non-dominant arm is specialized for closed-loop control. Building on recent results suggesting that the brain plans arm movements that takes advantage of gravity effects to minimize muscle effort, the present study tests the hypothesized superiority of the dominant arm motor system for effort minimization. Thirty participants (22.5 ± 2.1 years old; all right-handed) performed vertical arm movements between two targets (40° amplitude), in two directions (upwards and downwards) with their two arms (dominant and non-dominant). We recorded the arm kinematics and the electromyographic activity of the anterior and posterior deltoid to compare two motor signatures of the gravity-related optimization process; i.e., directional asymmetries and negative epochs on phasic muscular activity. We found that these motor signatures were still present during movements performed with the non-dominant arm, indicating that the effort-minimization process also occurs for the non-dominant motor system. However, these markers were reduced compared with movements performed with the dominant arm. This difference was especially prominent during downward movements, where the optimization of gravity effects occurs early in the movement. Assuming that the dominant arm is optimal to minimize muscle effort, as suggested by previous studies, the present results support the hypothesized superiority of the dominant arm motor system for effort-minimization.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-07-14 |