Department of Neurology, College of Medicine, Pennsylvania State University, Hershey, Pennsylvania, United States.
Department of Kinesiology, Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania, United States.
J Neurophysiol. 2023 Sep 1;130(3):497-515. doi: 10.1152/jn.00501.2022. Epub 2023 Aug 2.
Prior research has shown that coordination of bilateral arm movements might be attributed to either control policies that minimize performance and control costs regardless of bilateral symmetry or by control coupling, which activates bilaterally homologous muscles as a single unit to achieve symmetric performance. We hypothesize that independent bimanual control (movements of one arm are performed without influence on the other) and codependent bimanual control (two arms are constrained to move together with high spatiotemporal symmetry) are two extremes on a coordination spectrum that can be negotiated to meet infinite variations in task demands. To better understand and distinguish between these views, we designed a task where minimization of either control costs or asymmetry would yield different patterns of coordination. Participants made bilateral reaches with a shared visual cursor to a midline target. We then covertly varied the gain contribution of either hand to the shared cursor's horizontal position. Across two experiments, we show that bilateral coordination retains high task-dependent sensitivity to subtle visual feedback gain asymmetries applied to the shared cursor. Specifically, we found a change from strong spatial covariation between hands during equal gains to more independent control during asymmetric gains, which occurred rapidly and with high specificity to the dimension of gain manipulation. Furthermore, the extent of spatial covariation was graded to the magnitude of perpendicular gain asymmetry between hands. These findings suggest coordination of bilateral arm movements flexibly maneuvers along a continuous coordination spectrum in a task-dependent manner that cannot be explained by bilateral control coupling. Minimization of performance and control costs and efferent coupling between bilaterally homologous muscle groups have been separately hypothesized to describe patterns of bimanual coordination. Here, we address whether the mechanisms mediating independent and codependent control between limbs can be weighted for successful task performance. Using bilaterally asymmetric visuomotor gain perturbations, we show bimanual coordination can be characterized as a negotiation along a spectrum between extremes of independent and codependent control, but not efferent control coupling.
先前的研究表明,双边手臂运动的协调可能归因于最小化性能和控制成本的控制策略,而不考虑双边对称性,或者归因于控制耦合,即激活双侧同源肌肉作为一个单元来实现对称性能。我们假设独立的双手控制(一只手臂的运动不受另一只手臂的影响)和相依的双手控制(两只手臂被约束在一起以高时空对称性移动)是协调频谱上的两个极端,可以协商以满足任务需求的无限变化。为了更好地理解和区分这些观点,我们设计了一项任务,其中最小化控制成本或不对称性将产生不同的协调模式。参与者用共享的视觉光标进行双边到达中线目标。然后,我们秘密地改变了任一只手对共享光标的水平位置的增益贡献。在两个实验中,我们表明,双边协调在很大程度上仍然依赖于对共享光标应用的微妙视觉反馈增益不对称的任务相关敏感性。具体来说,我们发现,在等增益时,双手之间的空间协变量从强变为在不对称增益时更独立的控制,这种变化发生得很快,并且对增益操纵的维度具有高度特异性。此外,空间协变量的程度与手之间的垂直增益不对称的幅度成比例。这些发现表明,双边手臂运动的协调以依赖于任务的方式灵活地沿着连续的协调频谱进行操作,这不能用双边控制耦合来解释。性能和控制成本的最小化以及双侧同源肌肉群之间的传出耦合已分别被假设为描述双手协调模式的原因。在这里,我们研究了介导四肢之间独立和相依控制的机制是否可以根据任务表现进行加权。使用双侧不对称的视觉运动增益扰动,我们表明,双手协调可以被描述为在独立和相依控制的极端之间进行协商的频谱,而不是传出控制耦合。