Smith Craig P, Reynolds Raymond F
School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Birmingham, UK.
J Physiol. 2017 Feb 15;595(4):1339-1349. doi: 10.1113/JP273125. Epub 2016 Nov 13.
Reaching movements can be perturbed by vestibular input, but the function of this response is unclear. Here, we applied galvanic vestibular stimulation concurrently with real body movement while subjects maintained arm position either fixed in space or fixed with respect to their body. During the fixed-in-space conditions, galvanic vestibular stimulation caused large changes in arm trajectory consistent with a compensatory response to maintain upper-limb accuracy in the face of body movement. Galvanic vestibular stimulation responses were absent during the body-fixed task, demonstrating task dependency in vestibular control of the upper limb. The results suggest that the function of vestibular-evoked arm movements is to maintain the accuracy of the upper limb during unpredictable body movement, but only when reaching in an earth-fixed reference frame.
When using our arms to interact with the world, unintended body motion can introduce movement error. A mechanism that could detect and compensate for such motion would be beneficial. Observations of arm movements evoked by vestibular stimulation provide some support for this mechanism. However, the physiological function underlying these artificially evoked movements is unclear from previous research. For such a mechanism to be functional, it should operate only when the arm is being controlled in an earth-fixed rather than a body-fixed reference frame. In the latter case, compensation would be unnecessary and even deleterious. To test this hypothesis, subjects were gently rotated in a chair while being asked to maintain their outstretched arm pointing towards either earth-fixed or body-fixed memorized targets. Galvanic vestibular stimulation was applied concurrently during rotation to isolate the influence of vestibular input, uncontaminated by inertial factors. During the earth-fixed task, galvanic vestibular stimulation produced large polarity-dependent corrections in arm position. These corrections mimicked those evoked when chair velocity was altered without any galvanic vestibular stimulation, indicating a compensatory arm response to a sensation of altered body motion. In stark contrast, corrections were completely absent during the body-fixed task, despite the same chair movement profile and arm posture. These effects persisted when we controlled for differences in limb kinematics between the two tasks. Our results demonstrate that vestibular control of the upper limb maintains reaching accuracy during unpredictable body motion. The observation that such responses occurred only when reaching within an earth-fixed reference frame confirms the functional nature of vestibular-evoked arm movement.
到达动作会受到前庭输入的干扰,但其这种反应的功能尚不清楚。在此,我们在受试者保持手臂位置在空间中固定或相对于身体固定的同时,将电刺激前庭与实际身体运动同时进行。在空间固定的条件下,电刺激前庭导致手臂轨迹发生巨大变化,这与在身体运动时维持上肢准确性的补偿反应一致。在身体固定任务期间,电刺激前庭反应缺失,这表明上肢前庭控制存在任务依赖性。结果表明,前庭诱发的手臂运动的功能是在不可预测的身体运动期间维持上肢的准确性,但仅在以地球为固定参考系进行够取动作时才如此。
当我们用手臂与外界互动时,意外的身体运动会引入运动误差。一种能够检测并补偿这种运动的机制将是有益的。对前庭刺激诱发的手臂运动的观察为这种机制提供了一些支持。然而,从先前的研究中尚不清楚这些人工诱发运动背后的生理功能。对于这样一种机制要发挥作用,它应该仅在手臂以地球为固定参考系而非身体为固定参考系进行控制时才起作用。在后一种情况下,补偿将是不必要的甚至是有害的。为了验证这一假设,受试者坐在椅子上轻轻旋转,同时被要求保持伸出的手臂指向地球固定或身体固定的记忆目标。在旋转过程中同时施加电刺激前庭,以分离前庭输入的影响,不受惯性因素的污染。在地球固定任务期间,电刺激前庭在手臂位置产生了与极性相关的大的校正。这些校正与在没有任何电刺激前庭的情况下改变椅子速度时诱发的校正相似,表明手臂对身体运动改变的感觉有补偿反应。与之形成鲜明对比的是,尽管椅子运动模式和手臂姿势相同,但在身体固定任务期间完全没有校正。当我们控制两项任务之间肢体运动学的差异时,这些效应仍然存在。我们的结果表明,上肢的前庭控制在不可预测的身体运动期间维持够取准确性。这种反应仅在以地球为固定参考系进行够取动作时才出现的观察结果证实了前庭诱发手臂运动的功能性质。