This study assess ocular movements in a hand laterality judgment task in a population of musculoskeletal disorders. Reaction time, error rate and visual strategy are compared between musculoskeletal disorders and healthy patients, and between the different locations of the disorder.
Musculoskeletal disorders are a major public health issue. Recent studies showed that body schema alterations are involved in the chronification of those disorders. Those alterations bring the opportunity for new exploration or therapeutic solutions. Our hypothesis is that musculoskeletal disorders lead to motor imagery alterations relative to body schema disorders. Reaction time extension et error rate increase in a hand laterality judgment task would confirm that hypothesis. It is assumed that body schema alterations of patients suffering from musculoskeletal disorders could change with localisation, dependant on disorder's laterality and distality. It is a monocentric, prospective, case-control trial, with 4 subgroups of 30 patients : shoulder rotator cuff tendinopathy, carpal tunnel syndrome, chronic low back pain, healthy subjects. We compare reaction time and error rate on a hand laterality judgement task. In that task, participants are asked to identify hand right or left laterality, when those hand is presented on a computer screen, by answering with the keyboard. Hands are shown on palmar or dorsal view and with 12 different angles of rotation. An eye-tracking device register participant eye movements during the task.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
71
participants are asked to identify laterality of the hand presented on the screen
CHU Angers
Angers, France
error rate at the hand laterality judgment task
number of errors divided by the total number of hands presented
Time frame: 1 hour
reaction time
time to press on the keyboard the answer "Right" or "Left" after the hand was presented
Time frame: 1 hour
visual strategy
assessment of the image's areas most fixed with the eyes
Time frame: 1 hour
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