Delmas Stefan, Casamento-Moran Agostina, Park Seoung Hoon, Yacoubi Basma, Christou Evangelos A
Department of Applied Physiology and Kinesiology, University of Florida , Gainesville, Florida.
J Neurophysiol. 2018 Oct 1;120(4):2059-2065. doi: 10.1152/jn.00323.2018. Epub 2018 Jun 27.
Reaction time (RT) is the time interval between the appearance of a stimulus and initiation of a motor response. Within RT, two processes occur, selection of motor goals and motor planning. An unresolved question is whether perturbation to the motor planning component of RT slows the response and alters the voluntary activation of muscle. The purpose of this study was to determine how the modulation of muscle activity during an RT response changes with motor plan perturbation. Twenty-four young adults (20.5 ±1.1 yr, 13 women) performed 15 trials of an isometric RT task with ankle dorsiflexion using a sinusoidal anticipatory strategy (10-20% maximum voluntary contraction). We compared the processing part of the RT and modulation of muscle activity from 10 to 60 Hz of the tibialis anterior (primary agonist) when the stimulus appeared at the trough or at the peak of the sinusoidal task. We found that RT ( P = 0.003) was longer when the stimulus occurred at the peak compared with the trough. During the time of the reaction, the electromyography (EMG) power from 10 to 35 Hz was less at the peak than the trough ( P = 0.019), whereas the EMG power from 35 to 60 Hz was similar between the peak and trough ( P = 0.92). These results suggest that perturbation to motor planning lengthens the processing part of RT and alters the voluntary activation of the muscle by decreasing the relative amount of power from 10 to 35 Hz. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We aimed to determine whether perturbation to motor planning would alter the speed and muscle activity of the response. We compared trials when a stimulus appeared at the peak or trough of an oscillatory reaction time task. When the stimulus occurred at the trough, participants responded faster, with greater force, and less EMG power from 10-35 Hz. We provide evidence that motor planning perturbation slows the response and alters the voluntary activity of the muscle.
反应时间(RT)是指刺激出现与运动反应开始之间的时间间隔。在反应时间内,会发生两个过程,即运动目标的选择和运动规划。一个尚未解决的问题是,对反应时间的运动规划部分进行干扰是否会减慢反应速度并改变肌肉的自主激活。本研究的目的是确定在反应时间响应过程中肌肉活动的调制如何随运动计划干扰而变化。24名年轻人(20.5±1.1岁,13名女性)使用正弦预期策略(最大自主收缩的10-20%)进行了15次踝关节背屈等长反应时间任务试验。我们比较了刺激出现在正弦任务的波谷或波峰时,反应时间的处理部分以及胫前肌(主要 agonist)从10至60 Hz的肌肉活动调制。我们发现,与波谷相比,刺激出现在波峰时反应时间更长(P = 0.003)。在反应期间,波峰时10至35 Hz的肌电图(EMG)功率低于波谷(P = 0.019),而波峰和波谷之间35至60 Hz的EMG功率相似(P = 0.92)。这些结果表明,对运动规划的干扰会延长反应时间的处理部分,并通过减少10至35 Hz的相对功率量来改变肌肉的自主激活。新内容及值得注意之处我们旨在确定对运动规划的干扰是否会改变反应的速度和肌肉活动。我们比较了刺激出现在振荡反应时间任务的波峰或波谷时的试验。当刺激出现在波谷时,参与者反应更快,力量更大,且10 - 35 Hz的EMG功率更小。我们提供了证据表明运动规划干扰会减慢反应速度并改变肌肉的自主活动。