2003
DOI: 10.1007/s00221-003-1496-3
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Instabilities during antiphase bimanual movements: are ipsilateral pathways involved?

Abstract: The spatial and temporal coupling between the hands is known to be very robust during movements which use homologous muscles (in-phase or symmetric movements). In contrast, movements using nonhomologous muscles (antiphase or asymmetric movements) are less stable and exhibit a tendency to undergo a phase transition to in-phase movements as movement frequency increases. The instability during antiphase movements has been modeled in terms of signal interference mediated by the ipsilateral corticospinal pathways. … Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…The tendency for participants to transition from asymmetric coordination patterns to in-phase movements of the fingers or limbs has been thought to be due, at least in part, to biases originating in the action component of the perception-action system (e.g., Kagerer et al, 2002Kagerer et al, , 2003Peper et al, 2008). For example, the concept of neural crosstalk has been used to explain the findings of stability differences and phase transitions in various bimanual coordination patterns based on interactions in the forward command streams in the highly interconnected and redundant organization of the nervous system (for review, see Swinnen, 2002).…”
Section: Action Constraintsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The tendency for participants to transition from asymmetric coordination patterns to in-phase movements of the fingers or limbs has been thought to be due, at least in part, to biases originating in the action component of the perception-action system (e.g., Kagerer et al, 2002Kagerer et al, , 2003Peper et al, 2008). For example, the concept of neural crosstalk has been used to explain the findings of stability differences and phase transitions in various bimanual coordination patterns based on interactions in the forward command streams in the highly interconnected and redundant organization of the nervous system (for review, see Swinnen, 2002).…”
Section: Action Constraintsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to the crosstalk model, two independent motor plans exist for each limb and some fraction of the force commands for one limb is diverted to the other limb (Cattaert et al, 1999). It has been proposed that the movements produced by the symmetric activation of homologous muscles are stabilized when the contralateral and ipsilateral signals are integrated, while movements produced by the activation of nonhomologous muscles or asymmetric activation suffer from ongoing interference due to conflicting information and partial intermingling of signals controlling the two arms (e.g., Kagerer et al, 2003;Kennedy, Boyle, Rhee, & Shea, 2015a;Marteniuk, MacKenzie, & Baba, 1984).…”
Section: Action Constraintsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The difference in stability between the two modes can induce spontaneous phase transitions from the antiphase to the in-phase mode (Kelso, 1984) even when attempting to maintain an antiphase movement pattern, although the intentional component can stabilize an otherwise unstable antiphase pattern to some degree (Scholz and Kelso, 1990;Kelso, 1995;De Luca et al, 2010). In addition to the intentional component, the stability of antiphase movements also depends on learning (Temprado et al, 2002), perceptual bias (Mechsner et al, 2001), attention (Monno et al, 2000), and neural connections (Kennerley et al, 2002;Kagerer et al, 2003). Because the probability of these sudden errors differs between subjects (see Fig.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%