Kigawa Kazuyoshi, Izumizaki Masahiko, Tsukada Setsuro, Hakuta Naoyuki
Department of Physiology, Showa University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan; Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Showa University Fujigaoka Hospital, Yokohama, Japan.
Department of Physiology, Showa University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
PLoS One. 2015 Aug 28;10(8):e0137031. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0137031. eCollection 2015.
Proprioceptive signals coming from both arms are used to determine the perceived position of one arm in a two-arm matching task. Here, we examined whether the perceived position of one arm is affected by proprioceptive signals from the other arm in a one-arm pointing task in which participants specified the perceived position of an unseen reference arm with an indicator paddle. Both arms were hidden from the participant's view throughout the study. In Experiment 1, with both arms placed in front of the body, the participants received 70-80 Hz vibration to the elbow flexors of the reference arm (= right arm) to induce the illusion of elbow extension. This extension illusion was compared with that when the left arm elbow flexors were vibrated or not. The degree of the vibration-induced extension illusion of the right arm was reduced in the presence of left arm vibration. In Experiment 2, we found that this kinesthetic interaction between the two arms did not occur when the left arm was vibrated in an abducted position. In Experiment 3, the vibration-induced extension illusion of one arm was fully developed when this arm was placed at an abducted position, indicating that the brain receives increased proprioceptive input from a vibrated arm even if the arm was abducted. Our results suggest that proprioceptive interaction between the two arms occurs in a one-arm pointing task when the two arms are aligned with one another. The position sense of one arm measured using a pointer appears to include the influences of incoming information from the other arm when both arms were placed in front of the body and parallel to one another.
在双臂匹配任务中,来自双臂的本体感觉信号用于确定其中一只手臂的感知位置。在此,我们研究了在单臂指向任务中,一只手臂的感知位置是否会受到另一只手臂的本体感觉信号的影响。在该任务中,参与者用指示板指定一个不可见的参照手臂的感知位置。在整个研究过程中,两只手臂都处于参与者的视野之外。在实验1中,双臂都放在身体前方,参与者的参照手臂(即右臂)的肘屈肌接受70 - 80赫兹的振动,以诱发肘部伸展的错觉。将这种伸展错觉与左臂肘屈肌振动或不振动时的情况进行比较。在左臂振动的情况下,右臂由振动诱发的伸展错觉程度降低。在实验2中,我们发现当左臂处于外展位置振动时,双臂之间的这种动觉相互作用并未发生。在实验3中,当一只手臂处于外展位置时,该手臂由振动诱发的伸展错觉充分显现,这表明即使手臂处于外展状态,大脑从振动手臂接收到的本体感觉输入也会增加。我们的结果表明,当两只手臂相互对齐时,在单臂指向任务中会发生双臂之间的本体感觉相互作用。当两只手臂都放在身体前方且相互平行时,使用指示板测量的一只手臂的位置感觉似乎包含了来自另一只手臂传入信息的影响。