Supplemental vibrotactile feedback of real-time limb position enhances precision of goal-directed reaching

Author:

Risi Nicoletta12,Shah Valay1,Mrotek Leigh A.1ORCID,Casadio Maura123,Scheidt Robert A.134

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Marquette University and the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

2. Department of Informatics, Bioengineering, Robotics and Systems Engineering, University of Genova, Genoa, Italy

3. Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois

4. Division of Civil, Mechanical and Manufacturing Innovation, National Science Foundation, Alexandria, Virginia

Abstract

We examined vibrotactile stimulation as a form of supplemental limb state feedback to enhance planning and ongoing control of goal-directed movements. Subjects wore a two-dimensional vibrotactile display on their nondominant arm while performing horizontal planar reaching with the dominant arm. The vibrotactile display provided feedback of hand position such that small hand displacements were more easily discriminable using vibrotactile feedback than with intrinsic proprioceptive feedback. When subjects relied solely on proprioception to capture visuospatial targets, performance was degraded by proprioceptive drift and an expansion of task space. By contrast, reach accuracy was enhanced immediately when subjects were provided vibrotactile feedback and further improved over 2 days of training. Improvements reflected resolution of proprioceptive drift, which occurred only when vibrotactile feedback was active, demonstrating that benefits of vibrotactile feedback are due, in part to its integration into the ongoing control of movement. A partial resolution of task space expansion persisted even when vibrotactile feedback was inactive, demonstrating that training with vibrotactile feedback also induced changes in movement planning. However, the benefits of vibrotactile feedback come at a cognitive cost. All subjects adopted a stereotyped strategy wherein they attempted to capture targets by moving first along one axis of the vibrotactile display and then the other. For most subjects, this inefficient approach did not resolve over two bouts of training performed on separate days, suggesting that additional training is needed to integrate vibrotactile feedback into the planning and online control of goal-directed reaching in a way that promotes smooth and efficient movement. NEW & NOTEWORTHY A two-dimensional vibrotactile display provided state (not error) feedback to enhance control of a moving limb. Subjects learned to use state feedback to perform blind reaches with accuracy and precision exceeding that attained using intrinsic proprioception alone. Feedback utilization incurred substantial cognitive cost: subjects moved first along one axis of the vibrotactile display, then the other. This stereotyped control strategy must be overcome if vibrotactile limb state feedback is to promote naturalistic limb movements.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)

Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Unit for Scientific and Technological Cooperation

Marie Curie Integration Grant

Whitaker Foundation International Fellowship

Marquette University Opus College of Engineering

National Science Foundation (NSF)

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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