1998
DOI: 10.2519/jospt.1998.28.2.81
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Knee Position Error Detection in Closed and Open Kinetic Chain Tasks During Concurrent Cognitive Distraction

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Cited by 14 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Thus, a distraction task was used to isolate the physiological ef-fects of nociceptive stimulation on JPS from a 'simple' distraction effect. The increase in some JPS variables with distraction is consistent with other studies of JPS [34], reaction time [6] and movement accuracy [15] indicating that distraction interferes with task performance. The fact that the distraction condition but not pain influenced JPS might be because the degree of self-reported distraction during the pain condition was not as great as during the distraction condition.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Thus, a distraction task was used to isolate the physiological ef-fects of nociceptive stimulation on JPS from a 'simple' distraction effect. The increase in some JPS variables with distraction is consistent with other studies of JPS [34], reaction time [6] and movement accuracy [15] indicating that distraction interferes with task performance. The fact that the distraction condition but not pain influenced JPS might be because the degree of self-reported distraction during the pain condition was not as great as during the distraction condition.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…For the move + arithmetic condition, the participants performed the joint-anglereproduction task 20 times while continuously subtracting 3 from the initial number 100. The subtracting task was intended to prevent the participants from selfmonitoring the movement [10]. For the arithmetic condition, the participants performed only the arithmetic subtraction task.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Neck pain has been shown to increase the size of an interpolated twitch during a maximal elbow flexion contraction, which is interpreted as an inability to drive muscles fully. As both distraction 24,25 and experimental pain 26 increase error in a proprioceptive task, it is not clear which component explains the inaccuracy. Alternatively, pain is known to demand attention, 15 that may detract from the participant's ability to perform the task.…”
Section: The Contribution Of Neck Pain To Increased Elbow Joint Positmentioning
confidence: 99%