Winstein C J, Horak F B, Fisher B E
Department of Biokinesiology and Physical Therapy, University of Southern California, Los Angeles 90033, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2000 Feb;130(3):298-308. doi: 10.1007/s002219900248.
The effects of predictability of load magnitude on anticipatory and triggered grip-force adjustments were studied as nine normal subjects used a precision grip to lift, hold, and replace an instrumented test object. Experience with a predictable stimulus has been shown to enhance magnitude scaling of triggered postural responses to different amplitudes of perturbations. However, this phenomenon, known as a central-set effect, has not been tested systematically for grip-force responses in the hand. In our study, predictability was manipulated by applying load perturbations of different magnitudes to the test object under conditions in which the upcoming load magnitude was presented repeatedly or under conditions in which the load magnitudes were presented randomly, each with two different pre-load grip conditions (unconstrained and constrained). In constrained conditions, initial grip forces were maintained near the minimum level necessary to prevent pre-loaded object slippage, while in unconstrained conditions, no initial grip force restrictions were imposed. The effect of predictable (blocked) and unpredictable (random) load presentations on scaling of anticipatory and triggered grip responses was tested by comparing the slopes of linear regressions between the imposed load and grip response magnitude. Anticipatory and triggered grip force responses were scaled to load magnitude in all conditions. However, regardless of pre-load grip force constraint, the gains (slopes) of grip responses relative to load magnitudes were greater when the magnitude of the upcoming load was predictable than when the load increase was unpredictable. In addition, a central-set effect was evidenced by the fewer number of drop trials in the predictable relative to unpredictable load conditions. Pre-load grip forces showed the greatest set effects. However, grip responses showed larger set effects, based on prediction, when pre-load grip force was constrained to lower levels. These results suggest that anticipatory processes pertaining to load magnitude permit the response gain of both voluntary and triggered rapid grip force adjustments to be set, at least partially, prior to perturbation onset. Comparison of anticipatory set effects for reactive torque and lower extremity EMG postural responses triggered by surface translation perturbations suggests a more general rule governing anticipatory processes.
研究了负荷大小的可预测性对预期和触发的握力调整的影响,九名正常受试者使用精确抓握来提起、握住并放回一个装有仪器的测试物体。研究表明,对可预测刺激的体验能够增强对不同幅度扰动的触发姿势反应的大小缩放。然而,这种被称为中枢定势效应的现象尚未在手的握力反应中得到系统测试。在我们的研究中,可预测性是通过在即将到来的负荷大小被重复呈现的条件下,或在负荷大小被随机呈现的条件下,对测试物体施加不同大小的负荷扰动来操纵的,每种情况都有两种不同的预负荷握力条件(无约束和有约束)。在有约束的条件下,初始握力保持在防止预加载物体滑动所需的最低水平附近,而在无约束的条件下,不施加初始握力限制。通过比较施加负荷与握力反应大小之间的线性回归斜率,测试了可预测(成组)和不可预测(随机)负荷呈现对预期和触发握力反应缩放的影响。在所有条件下,预期和触发的握力反应都与负荷大小成比例缩放。然而,无论预负荷握力约束如何,当即将到来的负荷大小可预测时,相对于负荷大小的握力反应增益(斜率)比负荷增加不可预测时更大。此外,相对于不可预测负荷条件,可预测负荷条件下掉落试验的次数更少,证明了中枢定势效应。预负荷握力显示出最大的定势效应。然而,当预负荷握力被限制在较低水平时,基于预测,握力反应显示出更大的定势效应。这些结果表明,与负荷大小相关的预期过程允许在扰动开始之前至少部分地设定自愿和触发的快速握力调整的反应增益。对由表面平移扰动触发的反应性扭矩和下肢肌电图姿势反应的预期定势效应的比较表明,存在一个更普遍的预期过程规则。