Department of Rehabilitation, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud university medical center, PO Box 9101, 6500 HB Nijmegen, the Netherlands; School of Kinesiology, University of British Columbia, Osborne Centre Unit I, 6108 Thunderbird Blvd, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
School of Kinesiology, University of British Columbia, Osborne Centre Unit I, 6108 Thunderbird Blvd, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
Hum Mov Sci. 2021 Dec;80:102857. doi: 10.1016/j.humov.2021.102857. Epub 2021 Sep 1.
The StartReact (SR) effect is the accelerated release of a prepared movement when a startling acoustic stimulus is presented at the time of the imperative stimulus (IS). SR paradigms have been used to study defective control of balance and gait in people with neurological conditions, but differences in emotional state (e.g. fear of failure) may be a potential confounder when comparing patients to healthy subjects. In this study, we aimed to gain insight in the effects of postural threat on the SR effect by manipulating surface height during a postural (lateral step) task and a non-postural (wrist extension) task.
Eleven healthy participants performed a lateral step perpendicular to the platform edge, and 19 participants performed a wrist extension task while standing at the platform edge. Participants initiated the movement as fast as possible in response to an IS that varied in intensity across trials (80 dB to 121 dB) at both low and high platform height (3.2 m). For the lateral step task, we determined anticipatory postural adjustments (APA) and step onset latencies. For the wrist extension task, muscle onset latencies were determined. We used Wilcoxon signed-rank tests on the relative onset latencies between both heights, to identify whether the effect of height was different for IS intensities between 103 and 118 dB compared to 121 dB.
For both tasks, onset latencies were significantly shortened at 121 dB compared to 80 dB, regardless of height. In the lateral step task, the effect of height was larger at 112 dB compared to 121 dB. The absolute onset latencies showed that at 112 dB there was no such stimulus intensity effect at high as seen at low surface height. In the wrist extension task, no differential effects of height could be demonstrated across IS intensities.
Postural threat had a significant, yet modest effect on shortening of RTs induced by a loud IS, with a mere 3 dB difference between standing on high versus low surface height. Interestingly, this effect of height was specific to the postural (i.e. lateral stepping) task, as no such differences could be demonstrated in the wrist extension task. This presumably reflects more cautious execution of the lateral step task when standing on height. The present findings suggest that applying stimuli of sufficiently high intensity (≥115 dB) appears to neutralize potential differences in emotional state when studying SR effects.
当令人惊讶的声音刺激在命令刺激(IS)出现时,准备好的运动就会加速释放,这就是 StartReact(SR)效应。SR 范式已被用于研究神经条件下平衡和步态的控制缺陷,但在将患者与健康受试者进行比较时,情绪状态(例如害怕失败)的差异可能是一个潜在的混杂因素。在这项研究中,我们旨在通过在姿势(侧向步)任务和非姿势(手腕伸展)任务中操纵表面高度,深入了解姿势威胁对 SR 效应的影响。
11 名健康参与者在平台边缘垂直进行侧向步,19 名参与者在平台边缘站立时进行手腕伸展任务。参与者以最快的速度响应 IS 开始运动,IS 的强度在试验中变化(80 dB 至 121 dB),平台高度较低和较高(3.2 m)。对于侧向步任务,我们确定了预期的姿势调整(APA)和步开始潜伏期。对于手腕伸展任务,确定了肌肉开始潜伏期。我们使用 Wilcoxon 符号秩检验对两个高度之间的相对开始潜伏期进行分析,以确定在 103 和 118 dB 与 121 dB 之间的 IS 强度下,高度的影响是否与 121 dB 不同。
对于这两个任务,与 80 dB 相比,121 dB 时的开始潜伏期显著缩短,无论高度如何。在侧向步任务中,112 dB 时的高度效应大于 121 dB。绝对开始潜伏期表明,在 112 dB 时,与低表面高度相比,在高表面高度时,不存在如此的刺激强度效应。在手腕伸展任务中,不能在 IS 强度之间显示出高度的差异影响。
姿势威胁对响亮的 IS 引起的 RT 缩短有显著的影响,但仅在高表面高度和低表面高度之间相差 3 dB。有趣的是,这种高度效应仅在姿势(即侧向跨步)任务中,在手腕伸展任务中则不能证明有这种差异。这大概反映了当站在高处时,侧向跨步任务的执行更加谨慎。目前的研究结果表明,当研究 SR 效应时,应用足够高强度的刺激(≥115 dB)似乎可以消除情绪状态的潜在差异。