Ganesh G, Osu R, Naito E
Center for Information and Neural Networks (CiNet), National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, 1-4 Yamadaoka, Osaka University Campus, Suita, Japan 5650871.
Sci Rep. 2013;3:2648. doi: 10.1038/srep02648.
Our brain is known to automatically optimize effort expenditure during motor coordination, such that for example, during bimanual braking of a bicycle, a well-oiled brake will automatically be used more than a corroded, heavy brake. But how does our brain infer the effort expenditure? All previous motor coordination models have believed that the effort in a task is known precisely to our brain, solely from the motor commands it generates. Here we show that this belief is incorrect. Through experiments and simulation we exhibit that in addition to the motor commands, the returning haptic signals play a crucial role in the inference of the effort during a force sharing task. Our results thus elucidate a previously unknown sensory-motor association that has major ramifications for our understanding of motor coordination and provides new insights into how sensory modifications due to ergonomics, stroke and disease can affect motor coordination in humans.
众所周知,我们的大脑在运动协调过程中会自动优化精力消耗,例如,在自行车双手刹车时,运转良好的刹车会比生锈且沉重的刹车被自动使用得更多。但是我们的大脑是如何推断精力消耗的呢?之前所有的运动协调模型都认为,大脑能仅从其产生的运动指令中精确知晓任务中的精力消耗。在此我们表明这种观点是错误的。通过实验和模拟,我们证明除了运动指令外,返回的触觉信号在力分配任务中的精力推断中也起着关键作用。因此,我们的研究结果阐明了一种此前未知的感觉运动关联,这对我们理解运动协调具有重大影响,并为人体工程学、中风和疾病导致的感觉改变如何影响人类运动协调提供了新的见解。