Carlsen Anthony N, Chua Romeo, Inglis J Timothy, Sanderson David J, Franks Ian M
School of Human Kinetics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1, Canada.
J Neurophysiol. 2009 Jan;101(1):306-14. doi: 10.1152/jn.00878.2007. Epub 2008 Nov 12.
Recent studies using a reaction time (RT) task have reported that a preprogrammed response could be triggered directly by a startling acoustic stimulus (115-124 dB) presented along with the usual "go" signal. It has been suggested that details of the upcoming response could be stored subcortically and are accessible by the startle volley, directly eliciting the correct movement. However, certain muscles (e.g., intrinsic hand) are heavily dependent on cortico-motoneuronal connections and thus would not be directly subject to the subcortical startle volley in a similar way to muscles whose innervations include extensive reticular connections. In this study, 14 participants performed 75 trials in each of two tasks within a RT paradigm: an arm extension task and an index finger abduction task. In 12 trials within each task, the regular go stimulus (82 dB) was replaced with a 115-dB startling stimulus. Results showed that, in the arm task, the presence of a startle reaction led to significantly shorter latency arm movements compared with the effect of the increased stimulus intensity alone. In contrast, for the finger task, no additional decrease in RT caused by startle was observed. Taken together, these results suggest that only movements that involve muscles more strongly innervated by subcortical pathways are susceptible to response advancement by startle.
最近使用反应时间(RT)任务的研究报告称,与通常的“开始”信号同时呈现的令人吃惊的听觉刺激(115 - 124分贝)能够直接触发预先设定的反应。有人提出,即将做出的反应细节可能存储在皮层下,并且可以被惊吓性神经冲动所利用,直接引发正确的动作。然而,某些肌肉(例如手部固有肌)严重依赖皮质 - 运动神经元连接,因此与那些神经支配包括广泛网状连接的肌肉不同,它们不会以类似的方式直接受到皮层下惊吓性神经冲动的影响。在本研究中,14名参与者在RT范式下的两项任务中各进行了75次试验:一项手臂伸展任务和一项食指外展任务。在每个任务的12次试验中,常规的开始刺激(82分贝)被115分贝的惊吓刺激所取代。结果表明,在手臂任务中,与仅增加刺激强度的效果相比,惊吓反应的存在导致手臂动作的潜伏期显著缩短。相比之下,对于手指任务,未观察到惊吓引起的反应时间进一步缩短。综上所述,这些结果表明,只有涉及由皮层下通路更强有力地支配的肌肉的动作才容易受到惊吓而使反应提前。