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Perception of Spatial Requirements for Wheelchair Locomotion in Experienced Users with Tetraplegia

[Abstract] This study focused on whether wheelchair users showed enhanced ability to estimate the space required for locomotion with familiar and unfamiliar wheelchairs. Tetraplegic participants, who lacked somatosensory input from the upper limbs and were unable to obtain information about the dime...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of PHYSIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 2009, Vol.28 (1), p.15-21
Main Authors: Takahiro Higuchi, Nao Hatano, Koichi Soma, Kuniyasu Imanaka
Format: Article
Language:Japanese
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:[Abstract] This study focused on whether wheelchair users showed enhanced ability to estimate the space required for locomotion with familiar and unfamiliar wheelchairs. Tetraplegic participants, who lacked somatosensory input from the upper limbs and were unable to obtain information about the dimensions of a wheelchair from their hands, and able-bodied control participants made judgments of whether a doorway was passable with their usual form of locomotion (use of a familiar wheelchair or walking) or a new form of locomotion (use of an unfamiliar wheelchair for both groups). The relative perceptual boundary was determined, which was the ratio of the perceptual boundary between passable and impassable widths to the minimum passable widths. Tetraplegic participants accurately determined passable doorways in both familiar and unfamiliar wheelchairs. The control panicipants showed less accuracy for the wheelchair condition than for the walking condition. The findings obtained from the tetraplegic participants suggest that adaptation to altered body dimensions occurs in a short time only under a well-learned familiar form of locomotion. The findings also suggest that individuals are likely to rely more on visual memory of a passable space than somatosensory information about the dimensions of the wheelchair when determining passable doorways during locomotion. J Physiol Anthropol 28(1):15-21, 2009 http://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jpa2 [DOI:10.2114/jpa2.28.15]
ISSN:1880-6791