Kinematic differences of prehensile task executed with different speed and hand dominance in healthy participants

Movement speed is rarely emphasized in upper-extremities rehabilitation. However, faster movement might increase the intensity of practice and produce better movement quality. Few research has also investigated the differences in movement characteristics between both arms. Such studies can contribut...

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Main Author: Koon, Jinquan
Other Authors: Chow Jia Yi
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/59158
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-591582020-09-27T20:20:57Z Kinematic differences of prehensile task executed with different speed and hand dominance in healthy participants Koon, Jinquan Chow Jia Yi National Institute of Education Singapore Polytechnic DRNTU::Science Movement speed is rarely emphasized in upper-extremities rehabilitation. However, faster movement might increase the intensity of practice and produce better movement quality. Few research has also investigated the differences in movement characteristics between both arms. Such studies can contribute to more accurate progress report for the paretic limbs using inter-limb kinematic comparison. Thus, the purpose of this experiment is to evaluate the kinematic differences when healthy individuals execute a prehensile task as quickly as possible and with their preferred speed for both arms. A total of 20 healthy participants were recruited to carry out a reach, grasp and transport prehensile task. The thumb-middle finger separation, finger movement efficiency, reach path trajectory, wrist velocity, trunk rotation and the duration of the reach phase were measured. Faster movements produced significantly lower aperture path ratio (improve) (p < .01) and higher peak aperture for both arms (p < .001). Inter-limb comparisons saw higher peak aperture and velocity for the non-dominant limb (p < .05). Reach path ratio and trunk rotation did not reveal any significant findings between the different hand dominance and speed conditions (p > .0125). In conclusion, faster movement produces better movement quality for both limbs. Simple and cost free instruction to move faster might be an effective way of optimizing therapeutic sessions. The dominant and non-dominant arms showed differences in movement characteristics too. Therefore, extra consideration has to be taken when evaluating the rehabilitation progress of the paretic limb via inter-limb comparison. Bachelor of Science (Sport Science and Management) 2014-04-24T07:59:01Z 2014-04-24T07:59:01Z 2014 2014 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/59158 en 49 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science
Koon, Jinquan
Kinematic differences of prehensile task executed with different speed and hand dominance in healthy participants
description Movement speed is rarely emphasized in upper-extremities rehabilitation. However, faster movement might increase the intensity of practice and produce better movement quality. Few research has also investigated the differences in movement characteristics between both arms. Such studies can contribute to more accurate progress report for the paretic limbs using inter-limb kinematic comparison. Thus, the purpose of this experiment is to evaluate the kinematic differences when healthy individuals execute a prehensile task as quickly as possible and with their preferred speed for both arms. A total of 20 healthy participants were recruited to carry out a reach, grasp and transport prehensile task. The thumb-middle finger separation, finger movement efficiency, reach path trajectory, wrist velocity, trunk rotation and the duration of the reach phase were measured. Faster movements produced significantly lower aperture path ratio (improve) (p < .01) and higher peak aperture for both arms (p < .001). Inter-limb comparisons saw higher peak aperture and velocity for the non-dominant limb (p < .05). Reach path ratio and trunk rotation did not reveal any significant findings between the different hand dominance and speed conditions (p > .0125). In conclusion, faster movement produces better movement quality for both limbs. Simple and cost free instruction to move faster might be an effective way of optimizing therapeutic sessions. The dominant and non-dominant arms showed differences in movement characteristics too. Therefore, extra consideration has to be taken when evaluating the rehabilitation progress of the paretic limb via inter-limb comparison.
author2 Chow Jia Yi
author_facet Chow Jia Yi
Koon, Jinquan
format Final Year Project
author Koon, Jinquan
author_sort Koon, Jinquan
title Kinematic differences of prehensile task executed with different speed and hand dominance in healthy participants
title_short Kinematic differences of prehensile task executed with different speed and hand dominance in healthy participants
title_full Kinematic differences of prehensile task executed with different speed and hand dominance in healthy participants
title_fullStr Kinematic differences of prehensile task executed with different speed and hand dominance in healthy participants
title_full_unstemmed Kinematic differences of prehensile task executed with different speed and hand dominance in healthy participants
title_sort kinematic differences of prehensile task executed with different speed and hand dominance in healthy participants
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/59158
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