Department of Physiology, McGill University Montreal, QC, Canada.
Front Syst Neurosci. 2015 Apr 16;9:59. doi: 10.3389/fnsys.2015.00059. eCollection 2015.
Sensing gravity is vital for our perception of spatial orientation, the control of upright posture, and generation of our everyday activities. When an astronaut transitions to microgravity or returns to earth, the vestibular input arising from self-motion will not match the brain's expectation. Our recent neurophysiological studies have provided insight into how the nervous system rapidly reorganizes when vestibular input becomes unreliable by both (1) updating its internal model of the sensory consequences of motion and (2) up-weighting more reliable extra-vestibular information. These neural strategies, in turn, are linked to improvements in sensorimotor performance (e.g., gaze and postural stability, locomotion, orienting) and perception characterized by similar time courses. We suggest that furthering our understanding of the neural mechanisms that underlie sensorimotor adaptation will have important implications for optimizing training programs for astronauts before and after space exploration missions and for the design of goal-oriented rehabilitation for patients.
感知重力对于我们的空间定向感、直立姿势的控制以及日常活动的产生至关重要。当宇航员进入微重力或返回地球时,源自自身运动的前庭输入将与大脑的预期不匹配。我们最近的神经生理学研究提供了一些见解,即当前庭输入变得不可靠时,神经系统如何通过(1)更新其对运动感觉后果的内部模型,以及(2)加重更可靠的前庭外信息,来实现快速重组。这些神经策略反过来又与传感器运动性能的提高(例如,注视和姿势稳定性、运动、定向)以及以相似时间进程为特征的感知相关联。我们认为,深入了解传感器运动适应的神经机制将对优化宇航员在太空探索任务前后的训练计划以及为患者设计以目标为导向的康复具有重要意义。