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Intrinsic Hand Muscle Activation for Grasp and Horizontal Transport
Tsukuba, Japan March 22-March 24
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/WHC.2007.78Second Joint EuroHaptics Conference a ...
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Sara A. Winges, University of Minnesota, USA
Bornali Kundu, University of Minnesota, USA
John F. Soechting, University of Minnesota, USA
Martha Flanders, University of Minnesota, USA
During object manipulation, the hand and arm muscles produce internal forces on the object (grasping forces) and forces that result in external translation or rotation of the object in space (transport forces). The present study tested whether the intrinsic hand muscles are actively involved in transport as well as grasping. Intrinsic hand muscle activity increased with increasing demands for grasp stability, but also showed the timing and directional tuning patterns appropriate for actively transmitting external forces to the object, during the translational acceleration and deceleration of object transport.
Citation:
Sara A. Winges, Bornali Kundu, John F. Soechting, Martha Flanders, "Intrinsic Hand Muscle Activation for Grasp and Horizontal Transport," whc, pp.39-43, Second Joint EuroHaptics Conference and Symposium on Haptic Interfaces for Virtual Environment and Teleoperator Systems (WHC'07), 2007
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