Abstract

All published studies on micrographia, a diminution of letter size, examine handwriting in the horizontal direction. Writing horizontally typically requires increased wrist extension as handwriting progresses from left to right. Chinese characters, however, can be written not only horizontally from left to right, but also vertically from top to bottom. We examined the effect of handwriting direction on character size and stroke length. Fifteen participants with Parkinson’s disease (PD) and 15 age-matched controls wrote the same Chinese characters both horizontally and vertically. Handwriting performance was recorded with a digitizing tablet, and a custom-written computer program was used to provide objective data about character size and stroke length. The PD group had a linear decrease in overall character size and horizontal strokes along the writing sequence in the horizontal direction, but not in the vertical direction. The controls had shorter horizontal strokes in the horizontal than the vertical direction, but there was no progressive shortening of stroke length along the writing sequence. The results suggest that traditionally reported progressive micrographia in horizontal writing may not be generalizable to vertical writing. The observed decrease of handwriting size in the horizontal direction suggests that micrographia in PD may be associated with wrist extension. For clinical implications, patients may mitigate their micrographia by changing handwriting direction.

Highlights

  • Patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) experience handwriting deterioration even early in the disease [1]

  • Inspection of the data showed that while the PD group had linear decreases along the writing sequence in the horizontal direction, the decreases occurred from the 1st to 3rd character, but that there was an increase from the 3rd to 4th character in the vertical direction

  • Because the character size was dependent on the length of long horizontal strokes and the long vertical stroke, we examined the effect of handwriting direction on these stroke lengths

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Summary

Introduction

Patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) experience handwriting deterioration even early in the disease [1]. Their handwriting size diminishes, referred to as micrographia, which often manifests in two forms: consistent micrographia (a constant reduction in size) and progressive micrographia (a successive reduction in size as the writing progresses) [2]. Factors contributing to micrographia in PD are still under investigation. Studies have suggested that it may be associated with increased cognitive demands [6,7], poor coordination between simultaneous wrist and finger movements [8,9], and wrist extension stiffness [7]. All the published studies on micrographia, examined handwriting in the horizontal direction and analyzed samples primarily from Western countries [10,11,12]

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