Abstract

Previous studies revealed that healthy individuals consistently misjudge the size and shape of their hidden hand during a localisation task. Specifically, they overestimate the width of their hand and underestimate the length of their fingers. This would also imply that the same individuals misjudge the actual location of at least some parts of their hand during the task. Therefore, the primary aim of the current study was to determine whether healthy individuals could accurately locate the actual position of their hand when hidden from view, and whether accuracy depends on the type of localisation task used, the orientation of the hidden hand, and whether the left or right hand is tested. Sixteen healthy right-handed participants performed a hand localisation task that involved both pointing to and verbally indicating the perceived position of landmarks on their hidden hand. Hand position was consistently misjudged as closer to the wrist (proximal bias) and, to a lesser extent, away from the thumb (ulnar bias). The magnitude of these biases depended on the localisation task (pointing vs. verbal), the orientation of the hand (straight vs. rotated), and the hand tested (left vs. right). Furthermore, the proximal location bias increased in size as the duration of the experiment increased, while the magnitude of ulnar bias remained stable through the experiment. Finally, the resultant maps of perceived hand location appear to replicate the previously reported overestimation of hand width and underestimation of finger length. Once again, the magnitude of these distortions is dependent on the task, orientation, and hand tested. These findings underscore the need to control and standardise each component of the hand localisation task in future studies.

Highlights

  • Proprioception provides information about the body’s position in space, a fundamental requirement for motor control

  • Inspection of the estimated marginal means of the fitted model reveals that participants were more accurate at locating the position of their hidden hand when pointing with their contralateral hand (3.00 [1.83, 4.16] cm proximally from the actual location of their hand) compared to responding verbally (4.17 [3.01, 5.33] cm) [mean difference –1.18 [– 2.19, –0.16] cm, p = 0.024] (Fig 4B)

  • The results of the current study reveal that healthy participants consistently misjudge the location of their hand as closer towards their wrist compared to its actual location

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Proprioception provides information about the body’s position in space, a fundamental requirement for motor control. Joint capsules, and the skin provide proprioceptive afferent signals specifying the degree to which each joint is flexed or extended (e.g. ref [1,2,3,4]), knowing the spatial configuration of the body is insufficient to determine its position in space. Information about size and shape of the body’s parts is necessary to localise.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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