Sainburg R L, Kalakanis D
School of Health Related Professions, State University of New York at Buffalo, 14214, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2000 May;83(5):2661-75. doi: 10.1152/jn.2000.83.5.2661.
This study compares the coordination patterns employed for the left and right arms during rapid targeted reaching movements. Six right-handed subjects reached to each of three targets, designed to elicit progressively greater amplitude interaction torques at the elbow joint. All targets required the same elbow excursion (20 degrees ), but different shoulder excursions (5, 10, and 15 degrees, respectively). Movements were restricted to the shoulder and elbow and supported on a horizontal plane by a frictionless air-jet system. Subjects received visual feedback only of the final hand position with respect to the start and target locations. For motivation, points were awarded based on final position accuracy for movements completed within an interval of 400-600 ms. For all subjects, the right and left hands showed a similar time course of improvement in final position accuracy over repeated trials. After task adaptation, final position accuracy was similar for both hands; however, the hand trajectories and joint coordination patterns during the movements were systematically different. Right hand paths showed medial to lateral curvatures that were consistent in magnitude for all target directions, whereas the left hand paths had lateral to medial curvatures that increased in magnitude across the three target directions. Inverse dynamic analysis revealed substantial differences in the coordination of muscle and intersegmental torques for the left and right arms. Although left elbow muscle torque contributed largely to elbow acceleration, right arm coordination was characterized by a proximal control strategy, in which movement of both joints was primarily driven by the effects of shoulder muscles. In addition, right hand path direction changes were independent of elbow interaction torque impulse, indicating skillful coordination of muscle actions with intersegmental dynamics. In contrast, left hand path direction changes varied directly with elbow interaction torque impulse. These findings strongly suggest that distinct neural control mechanisms are employed for dominant and non dominant arm movements. However, whether interlimb differences in neural strategies are a consequence of asymmetric use of the two arms, or vice versa, is not yet understood. The implications for neural organization of voluntary movement control are discussed.
本研究比较了在快速定向伸手动作中左右臂所采用的协调模式。六名右利手受试者分别伸向三个目标,这些目标旨在在肘关节处引发逐渐增大的幅度交互扭矩。所有目标都需要相同的肘关节伸展幅度(20度),但肩部伸展幅度不同(分别为5度、10度和15度)。动作限制在肩部和肘部,并由无摩擦喷气系统在水平面上提供支撑。受试者仅收到关于最终手部位置相对于起始位置和目标位置的视觉反馈。为了激励,根据在400 - 600毫秒间隔内完成的动作的最终位置准确性给予分数。对于所有受试者,右手和左手在重复试验中最终位置准确性的提高具有相似的时间进程。任务适应后,双手的最终位置准确性相似;然而,动作过程中的手部轨迹和关节协调模式存在系统性差异。右手路径显示出从内侧到外侧的曲率,在所有目标方向上大小一致,而左手路径具有从外侧到内侧的曲率,其大小在三个目标方向上逐渐增加。逆动力学分析揭示了左右臂在肌肉和节段间扭矩协调方面存在显著差异。虽然左肘肌肉扭矩在很大程度上促成了肘部加速,但右臂协调的特点是近端控制策略,其中两个关节的运动主要由肩部肌肉的作用驱动。此外,右手路径方向的变化与肘部交互扭矩脉冲无关,表明肌肉动作与节段间动力学之间的熟练协调。相比之下,左手路径方向的变化与肘部交互扭矩脉冲直接相关。这些发现强烈表明,优势臂和非优势臂的运动采用了不同的神经控制机制。然而,神经策略中的肢体间差异是双臂不对称使用的结果,还是反之,目前尚不清楚。本文讨论了这些发现对随意运动控制神经组织的意义。