Revol Patrice, Collette Sarah, Boulot Zoe, Foncelle Alexandre, Niki Chiharu, Thura David, Imai Akila, Jacquin-Courtois Sophie, Cabanac Michel, Osiurak François, Rossetti Yves
Plate-forme "Mouvement et Handicap," Hôpital Henry-Gabrielle, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Saint-Genis-Laval, France.
Inserm UMR-S 1028, CNRS UMR 5292, ImpAct, Centre de Recherche en Neurosciences de Lyon, Université Lyon 1, Bron, France.
Front Psychol. 2019 Jun 4;10:1248. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01248. eCollection 2019.
Every day and every hour, we feel we perform numerous voluntary actions, i.e., actions under the control of our will. Individual's ability to initiate goal-directed movement is classically described as a hierarchical motor organization, from an intentional module, mostly considered as a black box, to muscular activity supporting action execution. The general focus is usually set on the triggering of action by intention, which is assumed to be the only entry to the action cascade, rather than on the preceding formation of intentions. If intentions play a key role in the specification of movement kinematic parameters, it remains largely unknown whether unconscious cognitive processes may also affect action preparation and unfolding. Recently, a seemingly irrelevant variable, thirst, was shown to modulate a simple arbitrary action such as key-pressing. Thirsty individuals were shown to produce stronger motor inhibition in no-go trials when a glass of water was present. In the present experiment, we intended to explore whether motor inhibition operates not only upstream from the action cascade but may also affect the unfolding of reaching movements, i.e., at a lower-level control. Thirsty vs. non-thirsty control subjects were asked to reach and grasp green (go trial) or red glasses (no-go trial) filled with either water or transparent gel wax with a central candlewick. Thirsty subjects were faster to initiate actions toward the water glasses. They also exhibited an earlier maximal grip aperture and a global reduction of movement time which was mostly explained by a shortening of deceleration time. The deceleration phase was correlated with individual's thirst rating. In addition, no-go trial toward a glass of water tended to inhibit the next movement toward a glass filled with gel wax. Thus, our results show that an unintentional influence of an internal state can reorganize voluntary action structure not only at the decision-making level but also at the level of motor control. Although subjects explicitly paid more attention and were more cautious to glasses filled with water, they reported no explicit sensation of an increased urge to grasp it, further suggesting that these effects are controlled by covert mechanisms.
每一天、每一小时,我们都感觉自己在进行无数的自主行动,即受我们意志控制的行动。个体发起目标导向运动的能力传统上被描述为一种层级式的运动组织,从一个主要被视为黑箱的意向模块,到支持行动执行的肌肉活动。通常,人们普遍关注的是由意图触发行动,意图被认为是行动序列的唯一入口,而不是意图的前期形成。如果意图在运动学参数的设定中起关键作用,那么无意识认知过程是否也会影响行动准备和展开在很大程度上仍不为人知。最近,一个看似无关的变量——口渴,被证明可以调节诸如按键这样的简单随意动作。研究表明,当面前有一杯水时,口渴的个体在停止信号试验中会产生更强的运动抑制。在本实验中,我们旨在探究运动抑制是否不仅在行动序列的上游起作用,还可能影响伸手动作的展开,即在较低水平的控制层面。我们要求口渴的受试者与不口渴的对照受试者去够取并抓取装有水或透明凝胶蜡且中间有烛芯的绿色杯子(执行信号试验)或红色杯子(停止信号试验)。口渴的受试者对水杯发起行动的速度更快。他们还表现出更早达到最大抓握孔径,并且整体运动时间缩短,这主要是由于减速时间缩短所致。减速阶段与个体的口渴程度评分相关。此外,对一杯水的停止信号试验往往会抑制下一个朝向装有凝胶蜡杯子的动作。因此,我们的结果表明,一种内部状态的无意影响不仅可以在决策层面,还可以在运动控制层面重新组织自主行动结构。尽管受试者明确对装有水的杯子给予了更多关注且更加谨慎,但他们表示并没有明显感觉有更强烈的抓取冲动,这进一步表明这些影响是由隐蔽机制控制的。