Allen Trevor J, Ansems Gabrielle E, Proske Uwe
Department of Physiology, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, 3800, Australia.
J Physiol. 2007 Apr 15;580(Pt. 2):423-34. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2006.125161. Epub 2007 Jan 25.
In a forearm position-matching task in the horizontal plane, when one (reference) arm is conditioned by contraction and length changes, subjects make systematic errors in the placement of their other, indicator arm. Here we describe experiments that demonstrate the importance not just of conditioning the reference arm, but of the indicator arm as well. Total errors from muscle conditioning represented up to a quarter of the angular range available to subjects. The sizes of the observed effects have led us to repeat other, previously reported experiments. In a matching task in the vertical plane, when muscles of both arms were conditioned identically, if the subject supported their arms themselves, or when the arms were loaded by the addition of weights, the loading did not introduce new position errors. To test the effect of exercise, subjects' elbow flexors were exercised eccentrically or concentrically by asking them to lower or raise a set of weights using forearm muscles. The exercise produced 25-30% decreases in maximum voluntary contraction strength of elbow flexors and this led to significant position-matching errors. The directions and magnitudes of the errors were similar after the two forms of exercise and indicated that subjects perceived their exercised muscles to be longer than they actually were. To conclude, the new data from loading the arm are not consistent with the idea that the sense of effort accompanying support of a load, provides positional information in any simple way. Our current working hypothesis is that when muscles are active, position-sense involves operation of a forward internal model. Loading the arm produces predictable changes in motor output and afferent feedback whereas changes after exercise are unpredictable. This difference leads to exercise-dependent errors.
在水平面进行的前臂位置匹配任务中,当一只(参照)手臂因收缩和长度变化而受到条件作用时,受试者在放置另一只指示手臂时会出现系统性错误。在此,我们描述了一些实验,这些实验不仅证明了对参照手臂进行条件作用的重要性,还证明了对指示手臂进行条件作用的重要性。肌肉条件作用产生的总误差占受试者可用角度范围的四分之一。观察到的效应大小促使我们重复其他先前报道的实验。在垂直平面的匹配任务中,当双臂的肌肉受到相同的条件作用时,如果受试者自己支撑手臂,或者当通过增加重量给手臂加载时,加载并不会引入新的位置误差。为了测试运动的影响,通过要求受试者使用前臂肌肉降低或举起一组重量,对其肘部屈肌进行离心或向心运动。运动导致肘部屈肌的最大自主收缩力量下降了25% - 30%,这导致了显著的位置匹配误差。两种运动形式后的误差方向和大小相似,表明受试者感觉其运动后的肌肉比实际更长。总之,给手臂加载的新数据与负荷支撑时伴随的努力感以任何简单方式提供位置信息的观点不一致。我们目前的工作假设是,当肌肉活跃时,位置感涉及一个前向内部模型的运作。给手臂加载会在运动输出和传入反馈中产生可预测的变化,而运动后的变化是不可预测的。这种差异导致了与运动相关的误差。