Robot-aided assessment of wrist proprioception

Introduction: Impaired proprioception severely affects the control of gross and fine motor function. However, clinical assessment of proprioceptive deficits and its impact on motor function has been difficult to elucidate. Recent advances in haptic robotic interfaces designed for sensorimotor rehabi...

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Main Authors: Konczak, Jürgen, Cappello, Leonardo, Elangovan, Naveen, Contu, Sara, Khosravani, Sanaz, Masia, Lorenzo
Other Authors: School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107370
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/25622
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1073702023-03-04T17:21:16Z Robot-aided assessment of wrist proprioception Konczak, Jürgen Cappello, Leonardo Elangovan, Naveen Contu, Sara Khosravani, Sanaz Masia, Lorenzo School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences::Human anatomy and physiology::Neurobiology Introduction: Impaired proprioception severely affects the control of gross and fine motor function. However, clinical assessment of proprioceptive deficits and its impact on motor function has been difficult to elucidate. Recent advances in haptic robotic interfaces designed for sensorimotor rehabilitation enabled the use of such devices for the assessment of proprioceptive function. Purpose: This study evaluated the feasibility of a wrist robot system to determine proprioceptive discrimination thresholds for two different DoFs of the wrist. Specifically, we sought to accomplish three aims: first, to establish data validity; second, to show that the system is sensitive to detect small differences in acuity; third, to establish test–retest reliability over repeated testing. Methodology: Eleven healthy adult subjects experienced two passive wrist movements and had to verbally indicate which movement had the larger amplitude. Based on a subject’s response data, a psychometric function was fitted and the wrist acuity threshold was established at the 75% correct response level. A subset of five subjects repeated the experimentation three times (T1, T2, and T3) to determine the test–retest reliability. Results: Mean threshold for wrist flexion was 2.15°± 0.43° and 1.52°± 0.36° for abduction. Encoder resolutions were 0.0075°(flexion–extension) and 0.0032°(abduction–adduction). Motor resolutions were 0.2°(flexion–extension) and 0.3°(abduction–adduction). Reliability coefficients were rT2-T1 = 0.986 and rT3-T2 = 0.971. Conclusion: We currently lack established norm data on the proprioceptive acuity of the wrist to establish direct validity. However, the magnitude of our reported thresholds is physiological, plausible, and well in line with available threshold data obtained at the elbow joint. Moreover, system has high resolution and is sensitive enough to detect small differences in acuity. Finally, the system produces reliable data over repeated testing. Published version 2015-05-20T03:56:48Z 2019-12-06T22:29:27Z 2015-05-20T03:56:48Z 2019-12-06T22:29:27Z 2015 2015 Journal Article Cappello, L., Elangovan, N., Contu, S., Khosravani, S., Konczak, J., & Masia, L. (2015). Robot-aided assessment of wrist proprioception. Frontiers in human neuroscience, 9. 1662-5161 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107370 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/25622 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00198 25926785 en Frontiers in human neuroscience © 2015 Cappello, Elangovan, Contu, Khosravani, Konczak and Masia. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences::Human anatomy and physiology::Neurobiology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Biological sciences::Human anatomy and physiology::Neurobiology
Konczak, Jürgen
Cappello, Leonardo
Elangovan, Naveen
Contu, Sara
Khosravani, Sanaz
Masia, Lorenzo
Robot-aided assessment of wrist proprioception
description Introduction: Impaired proprioception severely affects the control of gross and fine motor function. However, clinical assessment of proprioceptive deficits and its impact on motor function has been difficult to elucidate. Recent advances in haptic robotic interfaces designed for sensorimotor rehabilitation enabled the use of such devices for the assessment of proprioceptive function. Purpose: This study evaluated the feasibility of a wrist robot system to determine proprioceptive discrimination thresholds for two different DoFs of the wrist. Specifically, we sought to accomplish three aims: first, to establish data validity; second, to show that the system is sensitive to detect small differences in acuity; third, to establish test–retest reliability over repeated testing. Methodology: Eleven healthy adult subjects experienced two passive wrist movements and had to verbally indicate which movement had the larger amplitude. Based on a subject’s response data, a psychometric function was fitted and the wrist acuity threshold was established at the 75% correct response level. A subset of five subjects repeated the experimentation three times (T1, T2, and T3) to determine the test–retest reliability. Results: Mean threshold for wrist flexion was 2.15°± 0.43° and 1.52°± 0.36° for abduction. Encoder resolutions were 0.0075°(flexion–extension) and 0.0032°(abduction–adduction). Motor resolutions were 0.2°(flexion–extension) and 0.3°(abduction–adduction). Reliability coefficients were rT2-T1 = 0.986 and rT3-T2 = 0.971. Conclusion: We currently lack established norm data on the proprioceptive acuity of the wrist to establish direct validity. However, the magnitude of our reported thresholds is physiological, plausible, and well in line with available threshold data obtained at the elbow joint. Moreover, system has high resolution and is sensitive enough to detect small differences in acuity. Finally, the system produces reliable data over repeated testing.
author2 School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
author_facet School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Konczak, Jürgen
Cappello, Leonardo
Elangovan, Naveen
Contu, Sara
Khosravani, Sanaz
Masia, Lorenzo
format Article
author Konczak, Jürgen
Cappello, Leonardo
Elangovan, Naveen
Contu, Sara
Khosravani, Sanaz
Masia, Lorenzo
author_sort Konczak, Jürgen
title Robot-aided assessment of wrist proprioception
title_short Robot-aided assessment of wrist proprioception
title_full Robot-aided assessment of wrist proprioception
title_fullStr Robot-aided assessment of wrist proprioception
title_full_unstemmed Robot-aided assessment of wrist proprioception
title_sort robot-aided assessment of wrist proprioception
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/107370
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/25622
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