--------------------
- Trajectory formation principles are the same after mild or moderate stroke doi link

Auteur(s): Mottet Denis, Van Dokkum E., Froger Jérôme, Gouaich Abdelkader, Laffont Isabelle

(Article) Publié: Plos One, vol. 12 p.e0173674 (2017)
Texte intégral en Openaccess : pubmedcentral


Ref HAL: hal-01773982_v1
PMID 28329000
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0173674
WoS: 000399094700028
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
10 Citations
Résumé:

When we make rapid reaching movements, we have to trade speed for accuracy. To do so, the trajectory of our hand is the result of an optimal balance between feed-forward and feed-back control in the face of signal-dependant noise in the sensorimotor system. How far do these principles of trajectory formation still apply after a stroke, for persons with mild to moderate sensorimotor deficits who recovered some reaching ability? Here, we examine the accuracy of fast hand reaching movements with a focus on the information capacity of the sensorimotor system and its relation to trajectory formation in young adults, in persons who had a stroke and in age-matched control participants. We find that persons with stroke follow the same trajectory formation principles, albeit parameterized differently in the face of higher sensorimotor uncertainty. Higher directional errors after a stroke result in less feed-forward control, hence more feed-back loops responsible for segmented movements. As a consequence, movements are globally slower to reach the imposed accuracy, and the information throughput of the sensorimotor system is lower after a stroke. The fact that the most abstract principles of motor control remain after a stroke suggests that clinicians can capitalize on existing theories of motor control and learning to derive principled rehabilitation strategies.