Tsay A J, Giummarra M J, Allen T J, Proske U
School of Psychological Sciences and Monash Institute of Cognitive and Clinical Neurosciences, Monash University, Clayton, Vic, 3800, Australia.
Caulfield Pain Management and Research Centre, Caulfield Hospital, Caulfield, Vic, 3162, Australia.
J Physiol. 2016 Feb 15;594(4):1037-49. doi: 10.1113/JP271498. Epub 2016 Jan 19.
Position sense at the human forearm can be measured in blindfolded subjects by matching positions of the arms or by a subject pointing to the perceived position of an unseen arm. Effects on position sense tested were: elbow muscle conditioning with a voluntary contraction, muscle vibration, loading the arm and elbow skin stretch. Conditioning contractions and vibration produced errors in a matching task, consistent with the action of muscle spindles as position sensors. Position errors in a pointing task were not consistent with the action of muscle spindles. Loading the arm or skin stretch had no effect in either matching or pointing tasks. It is proposed that there are two kinds of position sense: (i) indicating positions of different body parts relative to one another, using signals from muscle spindles; and (ii) indicating position of the body in extrapersonal space, using signals from exteroceptors, vision, touch and hearing.
Human limb position sense can be measured in two ways: in a blindfolded matching task, position of one limb is indicated with the other limb. Alternatively, position of a limb, hidden from view, is indicated with a pointer, moved by pressing a lever. These experiments examined the sensory basis of position sense measured in these two ways. Position errors were measured in 14 subjects after elbow flexors or extensors had been conditioned with a half-maximum voluntary contraction. In agreement with previous studies, in the matching trials, position errors were distributed according to a pattern consistent with the action of muscle spindles as the position sensors. In the pointing trials, all errors lay in the direction of extension of the true position of the hidden arm and their distribution was inconsistent with influences arising in muscle spindles. Vibration of elbow muscles produced an illusion of muscle lengthening during a matching task, while during the pointing task no illusion was present. Finally, the matching-pointing error difference was preserved, even when one arm was loaded with a weight or skin over the elbow was stretched. It is proposed that there are two kinds of position sense. One is signalled by muscle spindles, indicating position of one part of the body relative to another. A second provides information about the position of the body in extrapersonal space and here we hypothesise that exteroceptors, including vision, touch and hearing, acting via a central map of the body, provide the spatial information.
对于蒙眼受试者,可通过匹配双臂位置或让受试者指向不可见手臂的感知位置来测量人前臂的位置觉。所测试的对位置觉的影响因素有:通过自主收缩对肘部肌肉进行条件训练、肌肉振动、给手臂加载重量以及拉伸肘部皮肤。条件性收缩和振动在匹配任务中产生了误差,这与肌梭作为位置传感器的作用一致。指向任务中的位置误差与肌梭的作用不一致。给手臂加载重量或拉伸皮肤在匹配任务和指向任务中均无影响。有人提出存在两种位置觉:(i)利用来自肌梭的信号指示身体不同部位相对于彼此的位置;(ii)利用来自外感受器、视觉、触觉和听觉的信号指示身体在体外空间的位置。
人类肢体位置觉可通过两种方式测量:在蒙眼匹配任务中,用一条肢体指示另一条肢体的位置。或者,用一个通过按压杠杆移动的指针来指示隐藏起来看不到的肢体的位置。这些实验研究了通过这两种方式测量的位置觉的感觉基础。在对肘部屈肌或伸肌进行半最大自主收缩条件训练后,对14名受试者的位置误差进行了测量。与先前的研究一致,在匹配试验中,位置误差的分布模式与肌梭作为位置传感器的作用一致。在指向试验中,所有误差都位于隐藏手臂真实位置的伸展方向,其分布与肌梭产生的影响不一致。肘部肌肉振动在匹配任务中产生了肌肉拉长的错觉,而在指向任务中则没有错觉。最后,即使给一条手臂加载重量或拉伸肘部皮肤,匹配 - 指向误差差异仍然存在。有人提出存在两种位置觉。一种由肌梭发出信号,指示身体一部分相对于另一部分的位置。另一种提供关于身体在体外空间位置的信息,在此我们假设包括视觉、触觉和听觉在内的外感受器通过身体的中央图谱起作用,提供空间信息。