Patron Jerome, Stapley Paul, Pozzo Thierry
INSERM/ERM 207, Motricité & Plasticité, Université de Bourgogne, BP 27877, 21078 Dijon, France.
Exp Brain Res. 2005 Aug;165(1):84-96. doi: 10.1007/s00221-005-2283-0. Epub 2005 Apr 28.
Previous experiments by our group in normal gravity (1 G) have revealed spatial relationships between postural and focal components of whole-body reaching and pointing movements. We suggested that these relationships could be explained partly through the use of gravity to displace the CoM and attain the object or target position. In this study we compared human whole-body reaching in 1 G and microgravity (0 G) in order to more fully investigate how gravity contributes to strategies adopted for task execution and to determine possible invariant temporal relationships between multiple segments. Whole-body reaching movements made from the standing position in two experimental conditions of execution speed (naturally paced and as fast as possible) were recorded during periods of 1 G and 0 G in parabolic flight. Overall, at each speed of reaching, movement times were significantly slower when performed in 0 G than in 1 G for two of the three subjects, but all subjects were able to produce significantly faster movements in 0 G than in 1 G. Despite similar general trends across subjects observed in 1 G, angular displacements of reaching movements performed in 0 G differed greatly between subjects. There were changes at all joints, but above all at the shoulder and the ankle. However, despite a high intersubject and intratrial variability in 0 G, in both gravity conditions all subjects demonstrated times to peak curvilinear velocity for the finger (end effector) and the whole-body centre of mass (CoM) that coincided, regardless of the speed of execution. Moreover, cross-correlations between multiple segment curvilinear velocities and those of the CoM revealed tight, highly correlated temporal relationships between segments proximal to the CoM (which was expected). However, for more distal segments, the correlations were weaker, and the movements lagged behind movements of the CoM. The major and most interesting finding of this study was that although the finger was the most distal within the segment chain, with respect to the CoM, it was highly correlated with the CoM (0.99--0.98, all conditions) and with no time lag. Despite the large intersubject and inter-environmental variability recorded in this study, temporal relationships between postural task components (CoM displacements) and those of the focal movement (end-effector trajectory) were consistently conserved.
我们小组之前在正常重力(1G)环境下进行的实验揭示了全身伸展和指向运动中姿势和焦点成分之间的空间关系。我们认为,这些关系可以部分通过利用重力来移动质心并达到物体或目标位置来解释。在本研究中,我们比较了人类在1G和微重力(0G)环境下的全身伸展情况,以便更全面地研究重力如何影响任务执行所采用的策略,并确定多个节段之间可能存在的不变时间关系。在抛物线飞行的1G和0G阶段,记录了在两种执行速度(自然节奏和尽可能快)的实验条件下从站立姿势进行的全身伸展运动。总体而言,在每种伸展速度下,三名受试者中有两名在0G环境中进行运动时的运动时间明显比在1G环境中慢,但所有受试者在0G环境中都能比在1G环境中产生明显更快的运动。尽管在1G环境中观察到受试者之间有相似的总体趋势,但在0G环境中进行的伸展运动的角位移在受试者之间差异很大。所有关节都有变化,但尤其是肩部和脚踝。然而,尽管在0G环境中受试者之间和试验内存在很大的变异性,但在两种重力条件下,所有受试者的手指(末端效应器)和全身质心(CoM)达到曲线速度峰值的时间是一致的,与执行速度无关。此外,多个节段曲线速度与CoM曲线速度之间的互相关揭示了CoM近端节段之间紧密、高度相关的时间关系(这是预期的)。然而,对于更远端的节段,相关性较弱,运动落后于CoM的运动。本研究的主要且最有趣的发现是,尽管手指是节段链中最远端的部分,但相对于CoM而言,它与CoM高度相关(0.99 - 0.98,所有条件)且没有时间滞后。尽管本研究记录了受试者之间和环境之间的巨大变异性,但姿势任务成分(CoM位移)与焦点运动(末端效应器轨迹)之间的时间关系始终保持不变。