Functional plasticity of sensorimotor representations following short-term immobilization of the dominant versus non-dominant hands |
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Authors: | Aurore Meugnot Lucette Toussaint |
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Affiliation: | Université de Poitiers, Centre de Recherches sur la Cognition et l''Apprentissage, CeRCA, CNRS/UMR 7295, 5 rue Théodore Lefebvre, F-86000 Poitiers, France |
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Abstract: | The main purpose of the present study was to investigate the functional plasticity of sensorimotor representations for dominant versus non-dominant hands following short-term upper-limb sensorimotor deprivation. All participants were right-handed. A splint was placed either on the right hand or on the left hand of the participants during a brief period of 48 h and was used for the input/output signal restrictions. The participants were divided into 3 groups: right hand immobilization, left hand immobilization and control (without immobilization). The immobilized participants performed the hand laterality task before (pre-test) and immediately after (post-test) splint removal. The pre-/post-test procedure was similar for the control group. The main results showed a significant response time improvement when judging the laterality of hand stimuli in the control group. In contrast, the results showed a weaker response time improvement for the left-hand immobilization group and no significant improvement for the right-hand immobilization group. Overall, these results revealed that immobilization-induced effects were lower for the non-dominant hand and also suggested that 48 h of upper-limb immobilization led to an inter-limb transfer phenomenon regardless of the immobilized hand. The immobilization-induced effects were highlighted by the slowdown of the sensorimotor processes related to manual actions, probably due to an alteration in a general cognitive representation of hand movements. |
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Keywords: | Sensorimotor representation Hand laterality Hand immobilization Motor imagery |
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