Electrotactile proprioception training improves finger control accuracy and potential mechanism is proprioceptive recalibration

Sci Rep. 2024 Nov 4;14(1):26568. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-78063-5.

Abstract

This study presents a novel training technique, visual + electrotactile proprioception training (visual + EP training), which provides additional proprioceptive information via tactile channel during motor training to enhance the training effectiveness. In this study, electrotactile proprioception delivers finger aperture distance information in real-time, by mapping frequency of electrical stimulation to finger aperture distance. To test the effect of visual + EP training, twenty-four healthy subjects participated in the experiment of matching finger aperture distance with distance displayed on screen. Subjects were divided to three groups: the first group received visual training and the other two groups received visual + EP training with or without a post-training test with electrotactile proprioception. Finger aperture control error was measured before and after the training (baseline, 15-min post, 24-h post). Experimental data suggest that both training methods decreased finger aperture control error at 15-min post-training. However, at 24-h post-training, the training effect was fully retained only for the subjects who received visual + EP training, while it washed out for the subjects with visual training. Distribution analyses based on Bayesian inference suggest that the most likely mechanism of this long-term retention is proprioceptive recalibration. Such applications of artificially administered sense have the potential to improve motor control accuracy in a variety of applications.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Electric Stimulation* / methods
  • Female
  • Fingers* / physiology
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Proprioception* / physiology
  • Touch / physiology
  • Young Adult