Obhi Sukhvinder S, Haggard Patrick
CIHR Group on Action & Perception, Room 6246, Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, N6A 5C2, Canada.
Exp Brain Res. 2004 Jun;156(4):518-23. doi: 10.1007/s00221-004-1911-4. Epub 2004 May 15.
In everyday life we must constantly balance our intentions to act in a certain way with reactions that are imposed upon us by the outside world. Recent neuroimaging studies have examined these classes of movement separately but despite the fundamental requirement for us to efficiently organize our internally generated and externally triggered actions, few studies have examined the relationship between these two classes of movement. We measured EMG activity in the right first dorsal interosseous while subjects performed right index finger key presses either in an internally generated condition or an externally triggered condition. In addition, in an attempt to probe the relationship between the processing underlying these two types of action, we examined the effect on reaction time (RT) and EMG activity in a third "truncation" condition in which subjects were forced to switch from an intentional (internally generated) mode of response production to an externally triggered mode. Results indicated significantly greater muscle activation for actions that were internally generated as compared to externally triggered. Truncation caused responses to be delayed by, on average, 54.7 ms as compared with simple externally triggered responses, suggesting that the motor system cannot take advantage of preexisting levels of preparation when switching between internally generated and externally triggered actions. Interestingly, the unique EMG signatures of internally generated and externally triggered actions were preserved in truncation. Thus, subjects switched between the two types of action rather than simply modifying an ongoing action. The results provide peripheral physiological support for previous neuroimaging work suggesting that internally generated actions are preceded by greater levels of preparation than externally triggered actions. The present findings also raise the interesting possibility that the motor system processes these two classes of action separately even though the motor output required is the same.
在日常生活中,我们必须不断地平衡以特定方式行动的意图与外界施加给我们的反应。最近的神经影像学研究分别考察了这两类运动,但是尽管我们需要有效地组织内部产生的和外部触发的动作,却很少有研究考察这两类运动之间的关系。我们测量了受试者在内部产生条件或外部触发条件下进行右手食指按键时右手第一背侧骨间肌的肌电图活动。此外,为了探究这两种动作背后的加工过程之间的关系,我们在第三种“截断”条件下考察了对反应时间(RT)和肌电图活动的影响,在该条件下,受试者被迫从有意(内部产生)的反应产生模式切换到外部触发模式。结果表明,与外部触发的动作相比,内部产生的动作的肌肉激活明显更强。与简单的外部触发反应相比,截断导致反应平均延迟54.7毫秒,这表明运动系统在内部产生的动作和外部触发的动作之间切换时无法利用预先存在的准备水平。有趣的是,内部产生的和外部触发的动作独特的肌电图特征在截断中得以保留。因此,受试者在两种动作类型之间切换,而不是简单地修改正在进行的动作。这些结果为先前的神经影像学研究提供了外周生理支持,表明内部产生的动作比外部触发的动作有更高水平的准备。目前的研究结果还提出了一个有趣的可能性,即即使所需的运动输出相同,运动系统也会分别处理这两类动作。