Heart and Stroke Foundation Centre for Stroke Recovery, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Neuroscience. 2010 Oct 13;170(2):599-609. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2010.07.008. Epub 2010 Jul 13.
The cerebral cortex may play a role in the control of compensatory balance reactions by optimizing these responses to suit the task conditions and/or to stimulus (i.e. perturbation) characteristics. These possible contributions appear to be reflected by pre-perturbation and post-perturbation cortical activity. While studies have explored the characteristics and possible meaning of these different events (pre- vs. post-) there is little insight into the possible association between them. The purpose of this study was to explore whether pre- and post-perturbation cortical events are associated or whether they reflect different control processes linked to the control of balance. Twelve participants were presented temporally-predictable postural perturbations under four test conditions. The Block/Random tasks were designed to assess modifiability in CNS gain prior to instability, while the Unconstrained/Constrained tasks assessed responsiveness to the magnitude of instability. Perturbations were evoked by releasing a cable which held the participant in a forward lean position. The magnitude of pre-perturbation cortical activity scaled to perturbation amplitude when the magnitude of the perturbation was predictable [F(3,11)=2.906, P<0.05]. The amplitude of pre-perturbation cortical activity was large when the size of the forthcoming perturbation was unknown (13.8 + or - 7.9, 11.4 + or - 9.9, 16.9 + or - 9.3, and 16.1 + or - 10.6 muV for the Block Unconstrained and Constrained and Random Unconstrained and Constrained, respectively). In addition, N1 amplitude scaled to perturbation amplitude regardless of whether the size of the forthcoming perturbation was known (30.1 + or - 17.7, 11.4 + or - 7.1, 30.9 + or - 18.4, 12.4 + or - 6.1 muV). This is the first work to examine modifiability in the pre-perturbation cortical activity related to postural set alterations. The cerebral cortex differentially processes independent components prior to and following postural instability to generate compensatory responses linked to the conditions under which instability is experienced.
大脑皮层可能在补偿性平衡反应的控制中发挥作用,通过优化这些反应以适应任务条件和/或刺激(即扰动)特征。这些可能的贡献似乎反映在扰动前和扰动后的皮层活动中。虽然研究已经探索了这些不同事件(预-与后-)的特征和可能意义,但对于它们之间的可能关联知之甚少。本研究旨在探讨扰动前和扰动后的皮层事件是否相关,或者它们是否反映了与平衡控制相关的不同控制过程。12 名参与者在四种测试条件下接受了时间可预测的姿势扰动。Block/Random 任务旨在评估不稳定前 CNS 增益的可变性,而 Unconstrained/Constrained 任务则评估对不稳定程度的响应能力。通过释放一根电缆来诱发扰动,该电缆将参与者保持在前倾姿势。当扰动幅度可预测时,预扰动皮层活动的幅度与扰动幅度成比例[F(3,11)=2.906,P<0.05]。当即将到来的扰动大小未知时,预扰动皮层活动的幅度较大(Block Unconstrained 和 Constrained 以及 Random Unconstrained 和 Constrained 的分别为 13.8+/-7.9、11.4+/-9.9、16.9+/-9.3 和 16.1+/-10.6 muV)。此外,无论即将到来的扰动大小是否已知,N1 幅度都与扰动幅度成比例(分别为 30.1+/-17.7、11.4+/-7.1、30.9+/-18.4 和 12.4+/-6.1 muV)。这是首次研究与姿势设定改变相关的扰动前皮层活动的可变性。大脑皮层在姿势不稳定之前和之后对独立成分进行差异化处理,以产生与不稳定经历的条件相关的补偿反应。