Yang Jeng-Feng, Scholz John P, Latash Mark L
Biomechanics and Movement Science Program, Department of Physical Therapy, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2007 Jan;176(1):54-69. doi: 10.1007/s00221-006-0602-8. Epub 2006 Jul 28.
Although important differences exist between learning a new motor skill and adapting a well-learned skill to new environmental constraints, studies of force field adaptation have been used frequently in recent years to identify processes underlying learning. Most of these studies have been of reaching tasks that were each hand position was specified by a unique combination of joint angles. At the same time, evidence has been provided from a variety of tasks that the central nervous system takes advantage of the redundancy available to it when planning and executing functional movements. The current study attempted to determine whether a change in the use of joint motion redundancy is associated with the adaptation process. Both experimental and control subjects performed 160 trials of reaching in each of four adaptation phases, while holding the handle of a robot manipulandum. During the first and last adaptation phases, the robot motors were turned off. During phases 2 and 3 the motors produced a velocity-dependent force field to which experimental subjects had to adapt to regain relatively straight line hand movements during reaching to a target, while the motors remained off for the control group. The uncontrolled manifold (UCM) method was used to partition the variance of planar clavicle-scapular, shoulder, elbow and wrist joint movements into two orthogonal components, one (V(UCM)) that reflected combinations of joint angles that were equivalent with respect to achieving the average hand path and another (V(ORT)) that took the hand away from its average path. There was no change in either variance component for the control group performing 640 non-perturbed reaches across four 'pseudo-adaptation' phases. The experimental group showed adaptation to reaching in the force field that was accompanied initially by an increase in both components of variance, followed by a smaller decrease of V(UCM) than V(ORT) during 320 practice reaches in the force field. After initial re-adaptation to reaching to the null field, V(UCM) was higher in experimental than in control subjects after performing a comparable number of reaches. V(UCM) was also larger in the experimental group after re-adaptation when compared to the 160 null field reaching trials performed prior to initial force field introduction. The results suggest that the central nervous system makes use of kinematic redundancy, or flexibility of motor patterns, to adapt reaching performance to unusual force fields, a fact that has implications for the hypothesis that motor adaptation requires learning of formal models of limb and environmental dynamics.
尽管学习一项新的运动技能与使一项熟练掌握的技能适应新的环境限制之间存在着重要差异,但近年来力场适应研究经常被用于确定学习背后的过程。这些研究大多针对的是伸手够物任务,其中每个手部位置都由关节角度的独特组合来指定。与此同时,来自各种任务的证据表明,中枢神经系统在计划和执行功能性动作时会利用其可用的冗余度。当前的研究试图确定关节运动冗余度的使用变化是否与适应过程相关。实验对象和对照对象在握住机器人操作器的手柄时分别在四个适应阶段中的每个阶段进行了160次伸手够物试验。在第一个和最后一个适应阶段,机器人电机处于关闭状态。在第2和第3阶段,电机产生一个与速度相关的力场,实验对象必须适应该力场,以便在伸手够向目标时重新获得相对直线的手部运动,而对照组的电机则保持关闭状态。采用非受控流形(UCM)方法将锁骨 - 肩胛骨、肩部、肘部和腕部平面关节运动的方差划分为两个正交分量,一个分量(V(UCM))反映在实现平均手部路径方面等效的关节角度组合,另一个分量(V(ORT))则使手部偏离其平均路径。对照组在四个“伪适应”阶段进行640次无干扰伸手够物试验时,两个方差分量均无变化。实验组在力场中伸手够物时表现出适应,最初伴随着方差的两个分量均增加,随后在力场中的320次练习伸手够物过程中,V(UCM)的下降幅度小于V(ORT)。在最初重新适应到零场伸手够物后,在进行了相当数量的伸手够物试验后,实验组的V(UCM)高于对照组。与初始引入力场之前进行的160次零场伸手够物试验相比,实验组在重新适应后的V(UCM)也更大。结果表明,中枢神经系统利用运动学冗余或运动模式的灵活性来使伸手够物表现适应异常力场,这一事实对运动适应需要学习肢体和环境动力学的形式模型这一假设具有启示意义。