Department of Kinesiology & Health Science, Utah State University, United States.
Department of Kinesiology & Health Science, Utah State University, United States; Department of Psychology, Utah State University, United States.
Cortex. 2019 Aug;117:135-146. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2019.03.001. Epub 2019 Mar 21.
The present study explored how motor cortical activity was influenced by visual perception of complex environments that either afforded or obstructed arm and leg reactions in young, healthy adults. Most importantly, we focused on compensatory balance reactions where the arms were required to regain stability following unexpected postural perturbation. Our first question was if motor cortical activity from the hand area automatically corresponds to the visual environment. Affordance-based priming of the motor system was assessed using single-pulse Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) to determine if visual access to a wall-mounted support handle influenced corticospinal excitability. We evaluated if hand actions were automatically facilitated and/or suppressed by viewing an available handle within graspable range. Our second question was if the requirement for rapid movement to recover balance played a role in modulating any affordance effect in the hands. The goal was to disentangle motor demands related to postural threat from the impact of observation alone. For balance trials, a custom-built, lean and release apparatus was used to impose temporally unpredictable postural perturbations. In all balance trials, perturbations were of sufficient magnitude to evoke a compensatory change-in-support response; therefore, any recovery action needed to carefully take into account the affordances and constraints of the perceived environment to prevent a fall. Consistent with our first hypothesis, activity in an intrinsic hand muscle was increased when participants passively viewed a wall-mounted safety handle, in both seated and standing contexts. Contrary to our second hypothesis, this visual priming was absent when perturbations were imposed and the handle was needed to regain balance. Our results reveal that motor set is influenced by simply viewing objects that afford a grasp. We suggest that such preparation may provide an advantage when generating balance recovery actions that require quickly grasping a supportive handle. This priming effect likely competes with other task-dependent influences that regulate cortical motor output. Future studies should expand from limitations inherent with single-pulse TMS alone, to determine if vision of our surrounding world influences motor set in other contexts (e.g., intensified postural threat) and investigate if this priming corresponds to overt behavior.
本研究探讨了年轻健康成年人在观察复杂环境时,大脑运动皮质活动是如何受到手臂和腿部运动反应的影响的。更重要的是,我们专注于代偿性平衡反应,即在身体意外失去平衡时,手臂需要重新获得稳定性。我们的第一个问题是,手部区域的运动皮质活动是否会自动对应视觉环境。我们使用单脉冲经颅磁刺激(TMS)评估基于可供性的运动系统启动,以确定观察到壁挂式支撑手柄是否会影响皮质脊髓兴奋性。我们评估了在可触及范围内观察到可用手柄是否会自动促进和/或抑制手部动作。我们的第二个问题是,快速运动以恢复平衡的要求是否在调节手部的任何可供性效应中起作用。目标是将与姿势威胁相关的运动需求与单独观察的影响分开。对于平衡试验,使用定制的倾斜和释放装置来施加时间不可预测的姿势扰动。在所有平衡试验中,扰动的幅度足以引起补偿性的支撑变化反应;因此,任何恢复动作都需要仔细考虑感知环境的可供性和约束,以防止跌倒。与我们的第一个假设一致,当参与者被动观察壁挂式安全手柄时,无论是坐在还是站着,内在手部肌肉的活动都会增加。与我们的第二个假设相反,当施加扰动并且需要手柄来恢复平衡时,这种视觉启动就不存在了。我们的结果表明,仅仅通过观察提供抓握的物体,运动状态就会受到影响。我们认为,在需要快速抓住支撑手柄来产生平衡恢复动作时,这种准备可能会提供优势。这种启动效应可能与其他调节皮质运动输出的任务相关影响竞争。未来的研究应该从单脉冲 TMS 本身固有的限制扩展,以确定我们周围世界的视觉是否会在其他情况下影响运动状态(例如,增加姿势威胁),并研究这种启动是否与明显的行为相对应。