Differences in muscle activity and intermuscular coordination between dominant and non-dominant hands during chopstick manipulation
Hina Komi, Hiroshi Kurumadani, Kazuya Kurauchi, Shota Date, Toru Sunagawa

TL;DR
This study compares muscle activity and coordination in dominant and non-dominant hands during chopstick use to improve rehabilitation for stroke patients.
Contribution
The study identifies specific muscle coordination differences between dominant and non-dominant hands during chopstick manipulation.
Findings
Most intrinsic and extrinsic hand muscles showed similar activity between dominant and non-dominant hands.
Muscle activation patterns and weighting differed between dominant and non-dominant hands.
The dominant hand coordinated first and second lumbrical muscles, while the non-dominant hand did not.
Abstract
To develop an efficient rehabilitation program for patients with stroke to acquire fine motor skills such as chopstick manipulation, it is necessary to examine the differences in fundamental muscle functions between the hands during motor tasks. The aim of this study was to clarify the differences in muscle activity and intermuscular coordination between dominant and non-dominant hands during chopstick manipulation. Twenty-eight healthy adults performed the task of picking up different-sized objects using chopsticks with either their dominant or non-dominant hand. Surface electromyography of 11 intrinsic and extrinsic hand muscles was performed, and muscle activity and muscle activity waveforms during the task were calculated. Activity patterns and weighting for each pattern were extracted from the muscle activity waveforms using non-negative matrix factorization to represent muscle…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMotor Control and Adaptation · Muscle activation and electromyography studies · Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Studies
