Handedness is associated with less common input to spinal motor neurons innervating different hand muscles
Jean Maillet, Simon Avrillon, Antoine Nordez, Jérémy Rossi, François Hug
Abstract
How the neural control of manual behaviors differs between the dominant and nondominant hand remains poorly understood. This study shows that there is less common synaptic input between motor neurons innervating different muscles in the dominant than in the nondominant hand during isometric rotation tasks. This lower level of common input could confer higher flexibility in the recruitment of motor units.
Topics & Concepts
Isometric exerciseElectromyographyNeuroscienceMotor controlHand musclesMotor neuronPsychologyElectrophysiologyFlexibility (engineering)Physical medicine and rehabilitationAnatomyMedicineSpinal cordMathematicsPhysical therapyStatisticsMuscle activation and electromyography studiesMotor Control and AdaptationEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces