Gribble P L, Ostry D J
McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1B1, Canada.
J Neurophysiol. 1999 Nov;82(5):2310-26. doi: 10.1152/jn.1999.82.5.2310.
During multijoint limb movements such as reaching, rotational forces arise at one joint due to the motions of limb segments about other joints. We report the results of three experiments in which we assessed the extent to which control signals to muscles are adjusted to counteract these "interaction torques." Human subjects performed single- and multijoint pointing movements involving shoulder and elbow motion, and movement parameters related to the magnitude and direction of interaction torques were manipulated systematically. We examined electromyographic (EMG) activity of shoulder and elbow muscles and, specifically, the relationship between EMG activity and joint interaction torque. A first set of experiments examined single-joint movements. During both single-joint elbow (experiment 1) and shoulder (experiment 2) movements, phasic EMG activity was observed in muscles spanning the stationary joint (shoulder muscles in experiment 1 and elbow muscles in experiment 2). This muscle activity preceded movement and varied in amplitude with the magnitude of upcoming interaction torque (the load resulting from motion of the nonstationary limb segment). In a third experiment, subjects performed multijoint movements involving simultaneous motion at the shoulder and elbow. Movement amplitude and velocity at one joint were held constant, while the direction of movement about the other joint was varied. When the direction of elbow motion was varied (flexion vs. extension) and shoulder kinematics were held constant, EMG activity in shoulder muscles varied depending on the direction of elbow motion (and hence the sign of the interaction torque arising at the shoulder). Similarly, EMG activity in elbow muscles varied depending on the direction of shoulder motion for movements in which elbow kinematics were held constant. The results from all three experiments support the idea that central control signals to muscles are adjusted, in a predictive manner, to compensate for interaction torques-loads arising at one joint that depend on motion about other joints.
在诸如伸手够物等多关节肢体运动过程中,由于肢体节段围绕其他关节的运动,会在一个关节处产生旋转力。我们报告了三项实验的结果,在这些实验中,我们评估了对肌肉的控制信号在多大程度上进行调整以抵消这些“相互作用扭矩”。人类受试者进行了涉及肩部和肘部运动的单关节和多关节指向运动,与相互作用扭矩的大小和方向相关的运动参数被系统地操纵。我们检查了肩部和肘部肌肉的肌电图(EMG)活动,具体而言,是EMG活动与关节相互作用扭矩之间的关系。第一组实验检查了单关节运动。在单关节肘部运动(实验1)和肩部运动(实验2)过程中,在跨越固定关节的肌肉中观察到了阶段性EMG活动(实验1中的肩部肌肉和实验2中的肘部肌肉)。这种肌肉活动在运动之前出现,并且其幅度随即将到来的相互作用扭矩(非固定肢体节段运动产生的负荷)的大小而变化。在第三个实验中,受试者进行了涉及肩部和肘部同时运动的多关节运动。一个关节的运动幅度和速度保持恒定,而另一个关节的运动方向则发生变化。当肘部运动方向改变(屈曲与伸展)且肩部运动学保持恒定时,肩部肌肉中的EMG活动会根据肘部运动方向(以及因此在肩部产生的相互作用扭矩的符号)而变化。同样,在肘部运动学保持恒定的运动中,肘部肌肉中的EMG活动会根据肩部运动方向而变化。所有三项实验的结果都支持这样一种观点,即对肌肉的中枢控制信号会以预测的方式进行调整,以补偿相互作用扭矩——在一个关节处产生的负荷,该负荷取决于围绕其他关节的运动。