Hierarichical Control in Hand-Foot Coordination
2011; Wiley; Volume: 33; Issue: 33 Linguagem: Inglês
ISSN
1551-6709
AutoresRobert M. Kohl, Raymond W. McCoy, Kimberly Mount,
Tópico(s)Motor Control and Adaptation
ResumoHierarichical Control in Hand-Foot Coordination Robert Kohl Department of Kinesiology and Health Sciences, The College of William and Mary Raymond McCoy Department of Kinesiology and Health Sciences, The College of William and Mary Kimberly Mount Department of Kinesiology and Health Sciences, The College of William and Mary Abstract: There is much evidence to indicate that inter-hand coordination is temporally/spatially linked during maximal speed conditions. This linkage was examined across all limbs. In two experiments participants moved two limbs at maximal speed the same target distance (28 cm) while one limb negotiated a 20 cm vertical barrier. Experiment 1 demonstrated that the effects of a barrier hand on a non-barrier hand and the effects of a barrier foot on a non-barrier foot produced a similar pattern of results on movement time, peak velocity, time to peak, and peak height. Experiment 2 demonstrated that a barrier foot had greater impact on a non-barrier hand compared to the influence of a barrier hand on a non-barrier foot across dependent variables. This hierarchical relationship, where foot-control is weakly linked to hand-control but hand-control is strongly linked to foot-control, is cogent with the decoupling hypothesis for the origin of hominin bipedalism (Sylvester, 2006).
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