School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Hum Mov Sci. 2024 Aug;96:103237. doi: 10.1016/j.humov.2024.103237. Epub 2024 May 28.
Mirror therapy has become an effective and recommended intervention for a range of conditions affecting the upper limb (e.g. hemiparesis following stroke). However, little is known about how mirror feedback affects the control of bimanual movements (as performed during mirror therapy). In this study, in preparation for future clinical investigations, we examined the kinematics of bimanual circle drawing in unimpaired participants both with (Experiment 1) and without (Experiment 2) a visual template to guide movement. In both experiments, 15 unimpaired right-handed participants performed self-paced continuous bimanual circle-drawing movements with a mirror/symmetrical coordination pattern. For the mirror condition, vision was directed towards the mirror in order to monitor the reflected limb. In the no mirror condition, the direction of vision was unchanged, but the mirror was replaced with an opaque screen. Movements of both hands were recorded using motion capture apparatus. In both experiments, the most striking feature of movements was that the hand behind the mirror drifted spatially during the course of individual trials. Participants appeared to be largely unaware of this marked positional change of their unseen hand, which was most pronounced when a template to guide movement was visible (Experiment 1). Temporal asynchrony between the limbs was also affected by mirror feedback in both experiments; in the mirror condition, illusory vision of the unseen hand led to a relative phase lead for that limb. Our data highlight the remarkable impact that the introduction of a simple mirror can have on bimanual coordination. Modulation of spatial and temporal features is consistent with the mirror inducing a rapid and powerful visual illusion, the latter appearing to override proprioceptive signals.
镜像治疗已成为一种有效的推荐干预手段,可用于治疗多种影响上肢的疾病(例如中风后的偏瘫)。然而,对于镜像反馈如何影响双手运动的控制(如在镜像治疗中进行的运动),人们知之甚少。在这项研究中,为未来的临床研究做准备,我们在没有(实验 2)和有(实验 1)视觉模板引导运动的情况下,检查了未受损参与者进行双手圆形绘图运动的运动学。在这两个实验中,15 名未受损的右利手参与者以镜像/对称协调模式进行自我调节的连续双手圆形绘图运动。在镜像条件下,视线被引导至镜子,以监测反射肢体。在无镜条件下,视线方向不变,但镜子被不透明屏幕取代。双手的运动使用运动捕捉设备进行记录。在这两个实验中,运动最显著的特征是,在单个试验过程中,镜子后面的手在空间上漂移。参与者似乎在很大程度上没有意识到他们看不见的手的这种明显位置变化,当有模板引导运动时,这种变化最为明显(实验 1)。在两个实验中,镜像反馈也会影响四肢之间的时间同步性;在镜像条件下,看不见的手的虚幻视觉导致该肢体的相对相位提前。我们的数据突出了引入简单镜子可以对双手协调产生的显著影响。空间和时间特征的调制与镜子诱导快速而强大的视觉错觉一致,后者似乎覆盖了本体感觉信号。