首页> 外文期刊>Experimental Brain Research >Endpoint accuracy for a small and a large hand muscle in young and old adults during rapid, goal-directed isometric contractions.
【24h】

Endpoint accuracy for a small and a large hand muscle in young and old adults during rapid, goal-directed isometric contractions.

机译:在目标定向的快速收缩过程中,年轻人和老年人手的大小肌肉的端点精度。

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
获取外文期刊封面目录资料

摘要

The minimum variance theory proposes that stronger (larger) muscles produce less variable trajectories compared with weaker (smaller) muscles and thus can accomplish more accurate contractions. The purpose of the study was to determine the influence of muscle size and trajectory variability on the endpoint accuracy of goal-directed isometric contractions. Twelve young (25 +/- 5 years) and 12 old adults (76 +/- 6 years) performed 100 trials with each of two muscles in both hands. Subjects were instructed to match the peak of a force trajectory to a target force by controlling either the abduction (first dorsal interosseus muscle; FDI) or adduction force (second palmar interosseus muscle; SPI) exerted by the index finger of each hand. The time to peak force was 150 ms and the peak force required was 25% of the maximal force that could be achieved in 150 ms. Endpoint accuracy and variability in force and time along with intramuscular EMG activity of the agonist muscle (FDI and SPI) involved in each task were quantified for each set of 100 trials. The MVC force was less for the SPI muscle, and the force endpoint error and variance were greater in the SPI muscle compared with the FDI muscle. Conversely, endpoint measures that included timing were similar for the two muscles. Trajectory variability was greater for the FDI muscle, but did not influence endpoint error for either muscle. The young and old adults had similar strength values, but the old adults were less accurate and more variable than the young subjects. Nonetheless, the accuracy and variability displayed by the old adults for the two muscles was the same as that observed for the young adults. The force accuracy and variability findings are consistent with the predictions of the minimum variance theory that motor-output variability is inversely related to muscle size, strength, and motor unit number.
机译:最小方差理论提出,与较弱(较小)的肌肉相比,较强(较大)的肌肉产生的可变轨迹较少,因此可以完成更精确的收缩。这项研究的目的是确定肌肉大小和轨迹变异性对目标定向等距收缩终点准确性的影响。十二个年轻人(25​​ +/- 5岁)和12个成年人(76 +/- 6岁)用两只手的两只肌肉分别进行了100次试验。通过控制每只手的食指所施加的外展力(第一背骨间肌; FDI)或内收力(第二手掌骨间肌; SPI),指示受试者使运动轨迹的峰值与目标力相匹配。达到峰值力的时间为150毫秒,所需的峰值力为150毫秒内可达到的最大力的25%。对于每组100个试验,对每个任务中涉及的激动剂肌肉(FDI和SPI)的肌内EMG活动的终点准确性,力和时间的变异性以及肌内肌电活动进行了量化。与FDI肌肉相比,SPI肌肉的MVC力较小,而SPI肌肉的力终点误差和方差较大。相反,包括时机在内的端点测量对于两条肌肉是相似的。 FDI肌肉的轨迹变异性较大,但不影响任一肌肉的终点误差。年轻人和老年人具有相似的力量值,但老年人比年轻人更不准确,而且变化更大。尽管如此,老年人显示的两条肌肉的准确性和变异性与年轻人显示的相同。力的准确性和变异性发现与最小方差理论的预测一致,即电动机输出变异性与肌肉大小,力量和运动单位数量成反比。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号