Abstract

Inter-limb coupling, a phenomenon whereby each of the upper limbs tends to take on characteristics of the intended movement of the other, represents a limitation on the ability to perform asymmetrical bimanual movements. Two experiments each employing 16 dextral and 16 sinistral normal subjects are reported. In the first experiment evidence of inter-limb coupling was observed during a continuous bimanual rotary task. This coupling appeared to be asymmetrical, with the nonpreferred hand contributing more to coupling than the preferred hand, especially in dextrals. In the second experiment asymmetries in inter-limb coupling were found to be modified by the conscious direction of attention to one or other hand. This suggests that the often reported strong inter-limb asymmetry associated with dextrality, and the weaker assymetry associated with sinistrality, may be partly due to an underlying inter-limb attentional asymmetry in the former, and a relative lack of attentional asymmetry in the latter.

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