Abstract
We investigated proprioceptive acuity for location and motion of a never seen hand-held tool (30 cm long rod) and the accuracy of movements to place tool parts in the location of remembered visual targets. Ten blindfolded right-handed subjects (5 females) reached with the tool held in the right hand to touch the tip and midpoint to the stationary and moving left index-tip, to the right and left ear lobes and to remembered visual target locations. We also tested accuracy of left hand rod reaches to the ear lobes to determine if rod dimensions and control of tool movements experienced during right hand tool use could be used to accurately localize the rod parts when held in the left hand. Errors for right hand-held rod-tip movements to touch the stationary and moving left index-tip averaged only about 1 cm larger than observed previously for right hand movements to touch its index-tip to the left index-tip. The tool-tip was localized with lower mean distance errors (about 1 cm) than the tool-midpoint (5.5–6.5 cm) when reaching to touch the ear lobes with the rod in right and left hands. Right hand reaches to place the tool- tip and midpoint in remembered visual target locations were inaccurate with large overshoots of close targets and undershoots of far targets, similar to previous reports for reaching with the right hand to remembered visual targets. These results support the distalization hypothesis, that tool the tool endpoint becomes the effective upper limb endpoint when using the tool.
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