Korol Anna S, Gritsenko Valeriya
Department of Neuroscience, School of Medicine, West Virginia University, Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute, West Virginia University, Morgantown, USA.
Department of Human Performance, Division of Physical Therapy, School of Medicine, West Virginia University, Department of Neuroscience, School of Medicine, West Virginia University, Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute, West Virginia University, Morgantown, USA.
bioRxiv. 2024 Jun 18:2024.02.12.579990. doi: 10.1101/2024.02.12.579990.
Neural control of movement has to overcome the problem of redundancy in the multidimensional musculoskeletal system. The problem can be solved by reducing the dimensionality of the control space of motor commands, i.e., through muscle synergies or motor primitives. Evidence for this solution exists, multiple studies have obtained muscle synergies using decomposition methods. These synergies vary across different workspaces and are present in both dominant and non-dominant limbs. Here we explore the dimensionality of control space by examining muscle activity patterns across reaching movements in different directions starting from different postures performed bilaterally by healthy individuals. We further explore the effect of biomechanical constraints on the dimensionality of control space. We are building on top of prior work showing that muscle activity profiles can be explained by applied moments about the limb joints that reflect the biomechanical constraints. These muscle torques derived from motion capture represent the combined actions of muscle contractions that are under the control of the nervous system. Here we test the generalizability of the relationship between muscle torques and muscle activity profiles across different starting positions and between limbs. We also test a hypothesis that the dimensionality of control space is shaped by biomechanical constraints. We used principal component analysis to evaluate the contribution of individual muscles to producing muscle torques across different workspaces and in both dominant and non-dominant limbs. Results generalize and support the hypothesis. We show that the muscle torques that support the limb against gravity are produced by more consistent combinations of muscle co-contraction than those that produce propulsion. This effect was the strongest in the non-dominant arm moving in the lateral workspace on one side of the body.
运动的神经控制必须克服多维度肌肉骨骼系统中的冗余问题。这个问题可以通过降低运动指令控制空间的维度来解决,即通过肌肉协同作用或运动原语。有证据支持这种解决方案,多项研究已使用分解方法获得了肌肉协同作用。这些协同作用在不同的工作空间中有所不同,并且在优势肢体和非优势肢体中都存在。在这里,我们通过检查健康个体从不同姿势双侧开始向不同方向伸手运动时的肌肉活动模式,来探索控制空间的维度。我们进一步探讨生物力学约束对控制空间维度的影响。我们基于先前的研究工作,该工作表明肌肉活动概况可以通过反映生物力学约束的肢体关节上的施加力矩来解释。这些从运动捕捉中得出的肌肉扭矩代表了在神经系统控制下的肌肉收缩的联合作用。在这里,我们测试肌肉扭矩与肌肉活动概况之间的关系在不同起始位置和肢体之间的可推广性。我们还测试了一个假设,即控制空间的维度是由生物力学约束塑造的。我们使用主成分分析来评估单个肌肉在不同工作空间以及优势肢体和非优势肢体中产生肌肉扭矩的贡献。结果推广并支持了该假设。我们表明,与产生推进力的肌肉扭矩相比,对抗重力支撑肢体的肌肉扭矩是由更一致的肌肉共同收缩组合产生的。这种效应在身体一侧的外侧工作空间中移动的非优势手臂中最为明显。