Marteniuk R G, Bertram C P
School of Kinesiology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
Motor Control. 2001 Apr;5(2):151-65. doi: 10.1123/mcj.5.2.151.
The present paper reviews a series of prehension experiments recently conducted at Simon Fraser University's Human Motor Systems Laboratory, and attempts to place them into the larger context of multi-segmental control theory. Two related lines of experiments are reported: (a) experiments involving prehension during walking, and (b) experiments involving trunk-assisted reaching. Three-dimensional analyses of movements were performed via both world- and body-centered coordinates. Our results are supportive of the idea that both types of tasks are carried out using task-specific synergies. Furthermore, we assert that the actions of these synergies are comprised of variable contributions of different movement systems and result in smooth, world-centered end-point trajectories. We show evidence that this "motor equivalence" is the result of increasing the complexity of a given task. Finally, the implications of the present findings on prevailing motor control theory are discussed in terms of the theoretical mechanisms underlying the coordination of the transport and grasp components of prehension.
本文回顾了西蒙弗雷泽大学人类运动系统实验室最近进行的一系列抓握实验,并试图将其置于多节段控制理论的更广泛背景中。报告了两条相关的实验路线:(a) 涉及行走过程中抓握的实验,以及 (b) 涉及躯干辅助够取的实验。通过世界坐标系和身体坐标系对运动进行了三维分析。我们的结果支持这样一种观点,即这两种类型的任务都是使用特定任务的协同作用来执行的。此外,我们断言,这些协同作用的动作由不同运动系统的可变贡献组成,并导致以世界为中心的平滑终点轨迹。我们表明,这种“运动等效性”是给定任务复杂性增加的结果。最后,从抓握的运输和抓握组件协调的理论机制角度,讨论了本研究结果对现行运动控制理论的影响。