Reaching to inhibit a prepotent response: A wearable 3-axis accelerometer kinematic analysis.

The present work explores the distinctive contribution of motor planning and control to human reaching movements. In particular, the movements were triggered by the selection of a prepotent response (Dominant) or, instead, by the inhibition of the prepotent response, which required the selection of...

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Main Authors: Alessia Angeli, Irene Valori, Teresa Farroni, Gustavo Marfia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254514
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spelling doaj-7030a448aee040889f69aac1f2866fc72021-07-31T04:32:18ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01167e025451410.1371/journal.pone.0254514Reaching to inhibit a prepotent response: A wearable 3-axis accelerometer kinematic analysis.Alessia AngeliIrene ValoriTeresa FarroniGustavo MarfiaThe present work explores the distinctive contribution of motor planning and control to human reaching movements. In particular, the movements were triggered by the selection of a prepotent response (Dominant) or, instead, by the inhibition of the prepotent response, which required the selection of an alternative one (Non-dominant). To this end, we adapted a Go/No-Go task to investigate both the dominant and non-dominant movements of a cohort of 19 adults, utilizing kinematic measures to discriminate between the planning and control components of the two actions. In this experiment, a low-cost, easy to use, 3-axis wrist-worn accelerometer was put to good use to obtain raw acceleration data and to compute and break down its velocity components. The values obtained with this task indicate that with the inhibition of a prepotent response, the selection and execution of the alternative one yields both a longer reaction time and movement duration. Moreover, the peak velocity occurred later in time in the non-dominant response with respect to the dominant response, revealing that participants tended to indulge more in motor planning than in adjusting their movement along the way. Finally, comparing such results to the findings obtained by other means in the literature, we discuss the feasibility of an accelerometer-based analysis to disentangle distinctive cognitive mechanisms of human movements.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254514
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alessia Angeli
Irene Valori
Teresa Farroni
Gustavo Marfia
spellingShingle Alessia Angeli
Irene Valori
Teresa Farroni
Gustavo Marfia
Reaching to inhibit a prepotent response: A wearable 3-axis accelerometer kinematic analysis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Alessia Angeli
Irene Valori
Teresa Farroni
Gustavo Marfia
author_sort Alessia Angeli
title Reaching to inhibit a prepotent response: A wearable 3-axis accelerometer kinematic analysis.
title_short Reaching to inhibit a prepotent response: A wearable 3-axis accelerometer kinematic analysis.
title_full Reaching to inhibit a prepotent response: A wearable 3-axis accelerometer kinematic analysis.
title_fullStr Reaching to inhibit a prepotent response: A wearable 3-axis accelerometer kinematic analysis.
title_full_unstemmed Reaching to inhibit a prepotent response: A wearable 3-axis accelerometer kinematic analysis.
title_sort reaching to inhibit a prepotent response: a wearable 3-axis accelerometer kinematic analysis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The present work explores the distinctive contribution of motor planning and control to human reaching movements. In particular, the movements were triggered by the selection of a prepotent response (Dominant) or, instead, by the inhibition of the prepotent response, which required the selection of an alternative one (Non-dominant). To this end, we adapted a Go/No-Go task to investigate both the dominant and non-dominant movements of a cohort of 19 adults, utilizing kinematic measures to discriminate between the planning and control components of the two actions. In this experiment, a low-cost, easy to use, 3-axis wrist-worn accelerometer was put to good use to obtain raw acceleration data and to compute and break down its velocity components. The values obtained with this task indicate that with the inhibition of a prepotent response, the selection and execution of the alternative one yields both a longer reaction time and movement duration. Moreover, the peak velocity occurred later in time in the non-dominant response with respect to the dominant response, revealing that participants tended to indulge more in motor planning than in adjusting their movement along the way. Finally, comparing such results to the findings obtained by other means in the literature, we discuss the feasibility of an accelerometer-based analysis to disentangle distinctive cognitive mechanisms of human movements.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254514
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AT irenevalori reachingtoinhibitaprepotentresponseawearable3axisaccelerometerkinematicanalysis
AT teresafarroni reachingtoinhibitaprepotentresponseawearable3axisaccelerometerkinematicanalysis
AT gustavomarfia reachingtoinhibitaprepotentresponseawearable3axisaccelerometerkinematicanalysis
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