Abstract: | The mechanism of muscular effort perception in the shoulder was examined in this experiment. Two shoulder biomechanical models and experimental muscle activity data were used to assess physical exposure for a series of reaching tasks. Effort perception was quantitatively correlated to these measures of physical loading, both at the resultant torque (r2 = 0.50) and muscle activity model-based muscle force predictions (MFPs): r2 = 0.42, electromyography (EMG): r2 = 0.26) levels. Muscle data did not explain variation in effort perception more fully than torque data. The inclusion of subject and task variables improved the ability of each model to explain variability in effort perception (torque: r2 = 0.74; MFP: r2 = 0.67, EMG: r2 = 0.64). These results suggest that effort perception may not be fully explained by only an image of the motor command, but is rather a complex integrative quantity that is affected by other factors, such as posture and task goals, which may be dependent on sensory feedback. |