Abstract
Understanding human hand movement functionality is fundamental in neuroscience, robotics, prosthetics, and rehabilitation. People are used to investigate movement functionality separately from qualitative or quantitative perspectives. However, it is still limited to providing an integral framework from both perspectives in a logical manner. In this paper, we provide a systematic framework to qualitatively classify hand movement functionality, build prehensile taxonomy to explore the general influence factors of human prehension, and accordingly design a behavioral experiment to quantitatively understand the hand grasp. In qualitative analysis, two facts are explicitly proposed: (1) the arm and wrist make a vital contribution to hand movement functionality; (2) the relative position (relative position in this paper is defined as the distance between the center of the human wrist and the object center of gravity) is a general influence factor significantly impacting human prehension. In quantitative analysis, the significant influence of three factors, object shape, size, and relative position, is quantitatively demonstrated. Simultaneously considering the impact of relative position, object shape, and size, the prehensile taxonomy and behavioral experiment results presented here should be more representative and complete to understand human grasp functionality. The systematic framework presented here is general and applicable to other body parts, such as wrist, arm, etc. Finally, many potential applications and the limitations are clarified.
Highlights
The ability to perform various and skillful tasks using the hand is one of the critical characteristics of humans as a most refined primate, discriminating with other mammals (Cartmill, 1974)
In section Behavioral Experiment to Investigate Human Grasp Functionality, a behavioral experiment simultaneously considering the impact of relative position, object shape, and size is implemented to quantitatively demonstrate the significant influence and understand the way of hand grasp driven by influence factors
It is very interesting that we provide a quantitative evaluation of the posture diversity construction ability to prehensile taxonomy by PCs of behavioral experiment
Summary
Qualitative Classification and Quantitative Investigation of Hand Grasp Behavior. We provide a systematic framework to qualitatively classify hand movement functionality, build prehensile taxonomy to explore the general influence factors of human prehension, and design a behavioral experiment to quantitatively understand the hand grasp. Two facts are explicitly proposed: (1) the arm and wrist make a vital contribution to hand movement functionality; (2) the relative position (relative position in this paper is defined as the distance between the center of the human wrist and the object center of gravity) is a general influence factor significantly impacting human prehension. Considering the impact of relative position, object shape, and size, the prehensile taxonomy and behavioral experiment results presented here should be more representative and complete to understand human grasp functionality.
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