Abstract

Light touch on a rigid surface with minimal force below a specific threshold reduces postural sway by providing additional sensory cues from the fingertips. The feasibility of maintaining light touch depends on subject characteristics and task difficulty. Therefore, we introduce a method of maintaining light touch by using electrical muscle stimulation (EMS). We applied it in a single-leg standing task involving healthy adult subjects. The subjects stood upright in a single-leg stance on a firm surface and on foam rubber (FR), respectively, under three conditions: no touch (NT, NT-FR), light touch without EMS (LT, LT-FR), and light touch in which EMS was applied based on the contact force (LT-EMS, LT-EMS-FR). The results showed that the force control by EMS helped maintain light touch and reduce postural sway compared with the no-touch condition. The amplitude of postural sway under the touch condition with EMS was equivalent to that under the touch condition without EMS.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call