Sainburg R L, Ghez C, Kalakanis D
School of Health Related Professions, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, 14214, New York.
J Neurophysiol. 1999 Mar;81(3):1045-56. doi: 10.1152/jn.1999.81.3.1045.
The purpose of this study is to examine the mechanisms underlying control of intersegmental dynamics during reaching movements. Two experiments were conducted to determine the relative contributions of anticipatory and somatosensory feedback mechanisms in controlling intersegmental dynamics and whether adaptation to novel intersegmental dynamics generalizes across a range of movement directions. The mechanisms used to control interaction torques were examined by altering the inertial load of the forearm. Movements were restricted to the shoulder and elbow and supported on a horizontal plane by a frictionless air-jet system. Subjects made rapid out-and-back movements over a target line presented on a computer screen. The screen cursor disappeared at movement onset, and hand paths were displayed after each movement. After subjects adapted to a novel inertial configuration, the position of an attached mass was changed on pseudorandom trials. During these "surprise" trials, movements were initiated with the torque patterns appropriate to the previously learned inertial condition. As a result, characteristic errors in initial movement direction were predicted by an open-looped forward simulation. After these errors occurred, feedback mediated changes in torque emerged that, surprisingly, further decreased the accuracy of movement reversals. Nevertheless at the end of movement, the hand consistently returned to the starting position. It is plausible that the final position was determined completely by feedback-mediated changes in torque. In a second experiment, adaptation to a novel inertial load during movements made in a single direction showed limited transfer across a range of directions. These findings support and extend those of previous reports, which indicated combined anticipatory and postural mechanisms to coordinate rapid reaching movements. The current results indicate a three-stage control system that sequentially links anticipatory, error correction, and postural mechanisms to control intersegmental dynamics. Our results, showing limited generalization across directions, are consistent with previous reports examining adaptation to externally applied forces and extend those findings to indicate that the nervous system uses sensory information to recalibrate internal representations of the musculoskeletal apparatus itself.
本研究的目的是探究在伸手动作过程中节段间动力学控制的潜在机制。进行了两项实验,以确定预期机制和体感反馈机制在控制节段间动力学中的相对贡献,以及对新型节段间动力学的适应是否能在一系列运动方向上普遍存在。通过改变前臂的惯性负荷来研究用于控制相互作用扭矩的机制。运动限制在肩部和肘部,并由无摩擦喷气系统支撑在水平面上。受试者在电脑屏幕上呈现的目标线进行快速来回运动。屏幕光标在运动开始时消失,每次运动后显示手部轨迹。在受试者适应新的惯性配置后,在伪随机试验中改变附加质量的位置。在这些“意外”试验中,运动以适合先前学习的惯性条件的扭矩模式启动。结果,初始运动方向的特征性误差通过开环前向模拟得以预测。这些误差出现后,反馈介导的扭矩变化出现,令人惊讶的是,这进一步降低了运动反向的准确性。然而,在运动结束时,手始终回到起始位置。最终位置完全由反馈介导的扭矩变化决定,这似乎是合理的。在第二项实验中,在单方向运动期间对新型惯性负荷的适应在一系列方向上显示出有限的迁移。这些发现支持并扩展了先前报告的结果,先前报告指出预期机制和姿势机制相结合来协调快速伸手动作。当前结果表明存在一个三阶段控制系统,该系统依次连接预期机制、误差校正机制和姿势机制来控制节段间动力学。我们的结果表明在不同方向上的迁移有限,这与先前研究对外加力适应的报告一致,并扩展了这些发现,表明神经系统利用感觉信息重新校准肌肉骨骼系统本身的内部表征。