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Accuracy of aimed arm movements in changed gravity.
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1992
Year
Upright PostureMovement AnalysisKinesiologySensorimotor TransformationVisuomotor LearningArm MovementsAccelerometerMotor ControlRehabilitationApplied PhysiologyNormal GravityKinematicsHuman MovementElevator IllusionFine Motor ControlPhysical TherapyHealth Sciences
We studied the accuracy of aimed arm movements in normal gravity, and during the hypergravity (hyper-G) and microgravity (micro-G) episodes of KC-135 parabolic flights. Subjects pointed at mirror-viewed targets without sight of their arm, and final pointing position was measured by a digitizing pad. Compared with the normal gravity (normal-G) baseline, subjects pointed consistently higher in hyper-G, and still higher in micro-G. Results were not different if subjects viewed targets only during normal-G and pointed at their memorized position under changed gravity (changed-G); this suggests that the "elevator illusion" played a minor role in our study. The observed impairments were attributed to degraded proprioceptive feedback and/or inappropriate motor programs in changed-G. Pointing accuracy improved movement-to-movement but not parabola-to-parabola, indicating that prolonged exposure is needed for sustained adaptation.