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Tytuł pozycji:

The effect of a light finger touch on the signal complexity during quiet standing

Tytuł:
The effect of a light finger touch on the signal complexity during quiet standing
Autorzy:
Brachman, Anna
Sawicka, Anna
Bednarz, Bartłomiej
Akbas, Anna
Słomka, Kajetan J.
Data publikacji:
2022
Słowa kluczowe:
postural control
light touch
center of pressure regularity
postural balance
Język:
angielski
Dostawca treści:
BazTech
Artykuł
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The purpose of the study was to investigate the influence of additional tactile information (light fingertip touch) on the postural sway and regularity of center-of-pressure (COP) fluctuations. Thirty-two young, healthy participants performed a quiet standing task (30 s) on a force platform with and without light fingertip touch. COP time-series were analyzed using standard postural sway measures (range, root mean square error, velocity), COP regularity was measured with Sample entropy. Participants demonstrated significantly smaller postural sway with a light touch, but only in the anteroposterior direction. The amount of sway with additional tactile information in the sagittal plane reached the level of sway in the frontal plane without this information. Similarly, COP fluctuations were more irregular during light touch condition only in the anteroposterior direction, as evidenced by significantly higher Sample entropy. Furthermore, COP regularity decreased in the sagittal plane and reached level in the frontal plane without light touch. These results suggest that postural sway is mostly controlled in the sagittal plane and that in the mediolateral direction the control is mostly automated. In conclusion, our results support the notion that the light touch provides additional information which enhances postural stabilization. Our results expand the relation between COP regularity and the attention invested in posture in the touch domain and prove that light touch, as an attentional demanding task, leads to increased COP irregularity. Nonlinear measures of signal regularity (i.e., SampEn) provide surplus insight into human postural control and can be used as an additional useful tool to traditional balance measures.

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