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Journal Article

Citation

Inglis JT, Frank JS. Exp. Brain Res. 1990; 81(3): 573-580.

Affiliation

Department of Kinesiology, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1990, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2226690

Abstract

During voluntary movement, muscle spindles of both the agonist and antagonist muscles potentially can supply information about position of the limb. Muscle vibration is known to increase muscle spindle discharge and cause systematic distortions of limb position sense in humans. The following two experiments attempted to examine these contributions by separately vibrating over the triceps and biceps muscles during forearm positioning. In the first experiment, subjects performed a horizontal flexion or extension of the right arm to a mechanical stop randomly positioned at 20, 40 or 60 degrees. Vision was occluded and vibration was applied to the right arm. The perceived position of the right limb was assessed by instructing subjects to simultaneously match the right arm position with the left limb. Vibration of the shortening, agonist muscle had no effect on limb matching accuracy. However, antagonist muscle vibration resulted in a significant overestimation of the vibrated limb position by 6-13 degrees. The procedures for the second experiment were similar to the first, except that movements of the right limb were self-terminated and only flexion movements were performed. A screen was mounted over the arms and subjects were instructed to move the right arm until it was positioned beneath a marker on the screen. Vibration of the shortening agonist muscle had no effect on either the positioning accuracy of the right limb or matching accuracy of the left limb. However, antagonist muscle vibration resulted in significantly shorter movements (6-10 degrees) by the right limb and an overestimation of right limb position by the left, matching limb.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Language: en

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