Haith Adrian M, Pakpoor Jina, Krakauer John W
Departments of Neurology and
Departments of Neurology and School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB2 0SP, United Kingdom.
J Neurosci. 2016 Mar 9;36(10):3007-15. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3245-15.2016.
Initiating a movement in response to a visual stimulus takes significantly longer than might be expected on the basis of neural transmission delays, but it is unclear why. In a visually guided reaching task, we forced human participants to move at lower-than-normal reaction times to test whether normal reaction times are strictly necessary for accurate movement. We found that participants were, in fact, capable of moving accurately ∼80 ms earlier than their reaction times would suggest. Reaction times thus include a seemingly unnecessary delay that accounts for approximately one-third of their duration. Close examination of participants' behavior in conventional reaction-time conditions revealed that they generated occasional, spontaneous errors in trials in which their reaction time was unusually short. The pattern of these errors could be well accounted for by a simple model in which the timing of movement initiation is independent of the timing of movement preparation. This independence provides an explanation for why reaction times are usually so sluggish: delaying the mean time of movement initiation relative to preparation reduces the risk that a movement will be initiated before it has been appropriately prepared. Our results suggest that preparation and initiation of movement are mechanistically independent and may have a distinct neural basis. The results also demonstrate that, even in strongly stimulus-driven tasks, presentation of a stimulus does not directly trigger a movement. Rather, the stimulus appears to trigger an internal decision whether to make a movement, reflecting a volitional rather than reactive mode of control.
对视觉刺激做出反应而发起动作所花费的时间,比基于神经传导延迟所预期的时间要长得多,但原因尚不清楚。在一项视觉引导的伸手任务中,我们迫使人类参与者以低于正常的反应时间进行动作,以测试正常反应时间对于准确动作是否严格必要。我们发现,实际上参与者能够比他们的反应时间所表明的时间提前约80毫秒准确地做出动作。因此,反应时间包含了一个看似不必要的延迟,该延迟约占其持续时间的三分之一。仔细检查参与者在传统反应时间条件下的行为发现,在反应时间异常短的试验中,他们会偶尔产生自发错误。这些错误的模式可以通过一个简单的模型很好地解释,在该模型中,动作发起的时间与动作准备的时间无关。这种独立性解释了为什么反应时间通常如此迟缓:相对于准备而言,延迟动作发起的平均时间可降低动作在未得到适当准备之前就被发起的风险。我们的结果表明,动作的准备和发起在机制上是独立的,并且可能有不同的神经基础。结果还表明,即使在强刺激驱动的任务中,刺激的呈现也不会直接触发动作。相反,刺激似乎触发了一个关于是否做出动作的内部决策,这反映了一种意志而非反应性的控制模式。