Smith Victoria, Maslovat Dana, Carlsen Anthony N
School of Human Kinetics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada.
School of Kinesiology, University of British Columbia, British Columbia, Canada.
J Neurophysiol. 2019 Dec 1;122(6):2541-2547. doi: 10.1152/jn.00505.2019. Epub 2019 Oct 23.
The "StartReact" effect refers to the rapid involuntary triggering of a prepared movement in response to a loud startling acoustic stimulus (SAS). This effect is typically confirmed by the presence of short-latency electromyographic activity in startle reflex-related muscles such as the sternocleidomastoid (SCM); however, there is debate regarding the specific neural pathways involved in the StartReact effect. Some research has implicated a subcortically mediated pathway, which would predict different response latencies depending on the presence of a startle reflex. Alternatively, other research has suggested that this effect involves the same pathways responsible for voluntary response initiation and simply reflects higher preparatory activation levels, and thus faster voluntary initiation. To distinguish between these competing hypotheses, the present study assessed preparation level during a simple reaction time (RT) task involving wrist extension in response to a control tone or a SAS. Premotor RT and startle circuitry engagement (as measured by SCM activation) were determined for each trial. Additionally, preparation level at the go signal on each trial was measured using motor-evoked potentials (MEP) elicited by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Results showed that SAS trial RTs were significantly shorter ( = 0.009) in the presence of startle-related SCM activity. Nevertheless, preparation levels (as indexed by MEP amplitude) were statistically equivalent between trials with and without SCM activation. These results indicate that the StartReact effect relates to engagement of the startle reflex circuitry rather than simply being a result of an increased level of preparatory activation. The neural mechanism underlying the early triggering of goal-directed actions by a startling acoustic stimulus (SAS) is unclear. We show that although significant reaction time differences were evident depending on whether the SAS elicited a startle reflex, motor preparatory activation was the same. Thus, in a highly prepared state, the short-latency responses associated with the StartReact effect appear to be related to engagement of startle reflex circuitry, not differences in motor preparatory level.
“起始反应(StartReact)”效应是指个体对响亮的惊吓性听觉刺激(SAS)做出快速的、非自主的、预先准备好的动作反应。这种效应通常通过惊吓反射相关肌肉(如胸锁乳突肌,SCM)中短潜伏期肌电图活动来证实;然而,关于起始反应效应所涉及的具体神经通路存在争议。一些研究表明存在一条皮质下介导的通路,这意味着根据惊吓反射的存在与否,反应潜伏期会有所不同。另外,其他研究则认为这种效应涉及与自主反应起始相同的通路,仅仅反映了更高的准备激活水平,从而导致更快的自主起始。为了区分这些相互竞争的假设,本研究在一个简单反应时(RT)任务中评估准备水平,该任务要求参与者在听到控制音或SAS后进行手腕伸展动作。记录每次试验的运动前反应时和惊吓回路参与情况(通过SCM激活来衡量)。此外,使用经颅磁刺激(TMS)诱发的运动诱发电位(MEP)来测量每次试验中“开始”信号出现时的准备水平。结果显示,在存在与惊吓相关的SCM活动时,SAS试验的反应时显著更短( = 0.009)。然而,有SCM激活和无SCM激活的试验之间,准备水平(以MEP幅度为指标)在统计学上是等效的。这些结果表明,起始反应效应与惊吓反射回路的参与有关,而不仅仅是准备激活水平提高的结果。由惊吓性听觉刺激(SAS)早期触发目标导向动作的神经机制尚不清楚。我们发现,尽管根据SAS是否引发惊吓反射,反应时存在显著差异,但运动准备激活是相同的。因此,在高度准备状态下,与起始反应效应相关的短潜伏期反应似乎与惊吓反射回路的参与有关,而非运动准备水平的差异。