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Force Increase in a Repetitive Motor Task Inducing Motor Fatigue

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posted on 2018-09-10, 16:26 authored by Maria Rönnefarth, Rouven Bathe-Peters, Andreas Jooss, Linus Haberbosch, Michael Scholz, Sein Schmidt, Stephan A. Brandt

To evaluate task induced motor fatigue in a well-established finger tapping task, we analyzed tapping parameters and included the time course of measures of force. We hypothesized that a decline in tapping force would reflect task induced motor fatigue, defined by a lengthening of inter-tap intervals (ITI). A secondary aim was to investigate the reliability of tapping data acquisition with the force sensor. Results show that, as expected, tapping speed decreased linearly over time, due to both an increase of ITI and tap duration. In contrast, tapping force increased non-linearly over time and was uncorrelated to changes in tapping speed. Force data could serve as a measure to characterize task induced motor fatigue. Force sensors can assess a decline in tapping speed as well as an independent increase of tapping force. We argue that the increase of force reflects central compensation, i.e. perception of fatigue, due to an increase in task effort and difficulty.

Funding

This work was supported by the DFG (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft; Grant number: BR 1691/8-1).

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    Journal of Motor Behavior

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