https://jneuroengrehab.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12984-017-0254-x
- Tommaso ProiettiEmail authorView ORCID ID profile,
- Emmanuel Guigon,
- Agnès Roby-Brami and
- Nathanaël Jarrassé
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation201714:55
DOI: 10.1186/s12984-017-0254-x
© The Author(s) 2017
Received: 9 September 2016
Accepted: 15 May 2017
Published: 12 June 2017
Abstract
Background
The possibility to modify the usually
pathological patterns of coordination of the upper-limb in stroke
survivors remains a central issue and an open question for
neurorehabilitation. Despite robot-led physical training could
potentially improve the motor recovery of hemiparetic patients, most of
the state-of-the-art studies addressing motor control learning, with
artificial virtual force fields, only focused on the end-effector
kinematic adaptation, by using planar devices. Clearly, an interesting
aspect of studying 3D movements with a robotic exoskeleton, is the
possibility to investigate the way the human central nervous system
deals with the natural upper-limb redundancy for common activities like
pointing or tracking tasks.
Methods
We asked twenty healthy participants to
perform 3D pointing or tracking tasks under the effect of inter-joint
velocity dependant perturbing force fields, applied directly at the
joint level by a 4-DOF robotic arm exoskeleton. These fields perturbed
the human natural inter-joint coordination but did not constrain
directly the end-effector movements and thus subjects capability to
perform the tasks. As a consequence, while the participants focused on
the achievement of the task, we unexplicitly modified their natural
upper-limb coordination strategy. We studied the force fields direct
effect on pointing movements towards 8 targets placed in the 3D
peripersonal space, and we also considered potential generalizations on 4
distinct other targets. Post-effects were studied after the removal of
the force fields (wash-out and follow up). These effects were quantified
by a kinematic analysis of the pointing movements at both end-point and
joint levels, and by a measure of the final postures. At the same time,
we analysed the natural inter-joint coordination through PCA.
Results
During the exposition to the
perturbative fields, we observed modifications of the subjects movement
kinematics at every level (joints, end-effector, and inter-joint
coordination). Adaptation was evidenced by a partial decrease of the
movement deviations due to the fields, during the repetitions, but it
occurred only on 21% of the motions. Nonetheless post-effects were
observed in 86% of cases during the wash-out and follow up periods
(right after the removal of the perturbation by the fields and after 30
minutes of being detached from the exoskeleton). Important
inter-individual differences were observed but with small variability
within subjects. In particular, a group of subjects showed an over-shoot
with respect to the original unexposed trajectories (in 30% of cases),
but the most frequent consequence (in 55% of cases) was the partial
persistence of the modified upper-limb coordination, adopted at the time
of the perturbation. Temporal and spatial generalizations were also
evidenced by the deviation of the movement trajectories, both at the
end-effector and at the intermediate joints and the modification of the
final pointing postures towards targets which were never exposed to any
field.
Conclusions
Such results are the first quantified
characterization of the effects of modification of the upper-limb
coordination in healthy subjects, by imposing modification through
viscous force fields distributed at the joint level, and could pave the
way towards opportunities to rehabilitate pathological arm synergies
with robots.
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