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Functional magnetic resonance imaging and electromyography of neuro-physiological adaptations associated with cross-education of a complex strength task

Date

2005-12-01

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

ORCID

Type

Degree Level

Doctoral

Abstract

Cross-education of strength is a neural adaptation defined as the increase in strength of the untrained contralateral limb after unilateral training of the opposite homologous limb. The neural mechanisms of the effect have remained elusive, although it appears to be a motor learning adaptation. Despite cross-education of strength being an inter-limb effect, no previous study has determined the influence of handedness and the direction of transfer (dominant to non-dominant or the reverse). Arguably, this is partly responsible for massive variation in the literature regarding the magnitude of the effect. The primary purpose of this document is to attempt to determine the central and peripheral neuro-physiological mechanisms controlling cross-education of muscular strength. Prior to determining the mechanisms of the effect, the influence of handedness and the preferred direction of transfer for cross-education of strength must be addressed. The secondary purpose is to determine the preferential direction of transfer of cross-education of strength in order to isolate the circumstances in which the effect is more pronounced. Two experiments were necessary to meet these objectives. Experiment 1: The purpose was to determine the effect of the direction of transfer on cross-education in right-handed individuals. Subjects were randomized into a left-hand training (LEFT), right-hand training (RIGHT), or non-training control (CON) group. Strength training was 6 weeks of maximal isometric ulnar deviation, 4 times per week. The change in strength in the untrained limb was greatest in the RIGHT group (39.2%; p

Description

Keywords

Cross-education, fMRI, Neural Adaptation, Unilateral Resistance Training, EMG

Citation

Degree

Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)

Department

College of Kinesiology

Program

College of Kinesiology

Advisor

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DOI

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