Rabin Ely, Gordon Andrew M
Department of Biobehavioral Sciences, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2004 Apr;96(4):1555-60. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.01085.2003. Epub 2003 Dec 29.
Recent evidence suggests that reaching movements are more accurate when end point contact occurs, suggesting that fingertip contact contributes to a final estimation of arm position. In the present study we tested two hypotheses: 1). that fingertip contact influences illusions of arm movement produced by muscle vibration and 2). that this influence depends on the a priori context of the stability of the contact surface. Subjects sat with their elbows on a table and eyes closed. They demonstrated the perceived orientation of the left (cue) arm by mirroring the location with the right (report) arm. We manipulated deep proprioceptive cues by vibrating the left biceps brachia, causing illusions of elbow extension, and tested whether these illusions were altered when the fingertip remained in contact with a stable external surface. The context at this point represents a prior assumption that the external contact surface is stable. Midway through the experiment, the context was changed by challenging the prior assumption that the contact surface was stable by demonstrating that it could move. Unbeknownst to the subject, the external contact surface remained stable during data collection throughout the experiment. As expected, without tactile cues, biceps vibration caused illusory elbow extension. Conditions with fingertip contact and biceps vibration in the stable context demonstrated that contact largely eliminated the overestimation of cue arm elbow angle. However, in the context of a possibly unstable (movable) contact surface, the reports of elbow extension returned. Thus a priori notions about the stability context of an external contact surface influence how this tactile cue is integrated with proprioceptive sensory modalities to generate an estimate of arm location in space. These findings support the notion that tactile cues are used to calibrate proprioception against external spatial frameworks.
最近的证据表明,当肢体末端发生接触时,伸手动作会更准确,这表明指尖接触有助于对手臂位置进行最终估计。在本研究中,我们测试了两个假设:1)指尖接触会影响由肌肉振动产生的手臂运动错觉;2)这种影响取决于接触表面稳定性的先验背景。受试者肘部放在桌子上,闭上眼睛坐着。他们通过用右手(报告臂)镜像位置来展示左手(提示臂)的感知方向。我们通过振动左肱二头肌来操纵深部本体感觉线索,从而引起肘部伸展错觉,并测试当指尖保持与稳定的外部表面接触时这些错觉是否会改变。此时的背景代表了外部接触表面是稳定的这一先验假设。在实验进行到一半时,通过证明接触表面可以移动来挑战其稳定的先验假设,从而改变背景。在整个实验数据收集过程中,受试者并不知道外部接触表面实际上保持稳定。正如预期的那样,在没有触觉线索的情况下,肱二头肌振动会引起肘部伸展错觉。在稳定背景下指尖接触和肱二头肌振动的条件表明,接触在很大程度上消除了对提示臂肘部角度的高估。然而,在接触表面可能不稳定(可移动)的背景下,肘部伸展的报告又出现了。因此,关于外部接触表面稳定性背景的先验概念会影响这种触觉线索如何与本体感觉模态整合,以生成对空间中手臂位置的估计。这些发现支持了触觉线索用于根据外部空间框架校准本体感觉的观点。