The influence of grasping habits and object orientation on motor planning in children and adults

Abstract We investigated the influence of habitual grasp strategies and object orientation on motor planning in 3‐year‐olds and 4‐ to 5‐year‐old children and adults. Participants were required to rotate different vertically oriented objects around 180°. Usually, adults perform this task by grasping objects with an awkward grip (thumb and index finger pointing downward) at the beginning of the movement, in order to finish it with a comfortable hand position. This pattern corresponds to the well‐known end‐state comfort effect (ESC) in grasp planning. The presented objects were associated with different habitual grasp orientations that either corresponded with the grasp direction required to reach end‐state comfort (downward) or implied a contrary grasp orientation (upward). Additionally, they were presented either in their usual, canonical orientation (e.g., shovel with the blade oriented downward versus cup with its opening oriented upward) or upside down. As dependent variable we analyzed the number of grips conforming to the end‐state comfort principle (ESC score) realized in each object type and orientation condition. The number of grips conforming to ESC strongly increased with age. In addition, the extent to which end‐state comfort was considered was influenced by the actual orientation of the objects’ functional parts. Thus, in all age‐groups the ESC score was highest when the functional parts of the objects were oriented downward (shovel present...
Source: Developmental Psychobiology - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Tags: RESEARCH ARTICLE Source Type: research