Department of Neuroscience, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam 3015 GD, The Netherlands.
Department of Sensorimotor Neuroscience, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University, Nijmegen 6525 GD, The Netherlands.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Aug 6;121(32):e2404909121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2404909121. Epub 2024 Aug 2.
Human standing balance relies on the continuous monitoring and integration of sensory signals to infer our body's motion and orientation within the environment. However, when sensory information is no longer contextually relevant to balancing the body (e.g., when sensory and motor signals are incongruent), sensory-evoked balance responses are rapidly suppressed, much earlier than any conscious perception of changes in balance control. Here, we used a robotic balance simulator to assess whether associatively learned postural responses are similarly modulated by sensorimotor incongruence and contextual relevance to postural control. Twenty-nine participants in three groups were classically conditioned to generate postural responses to whole-body perturbations when presented with an initially neutral sound cue. During catch and extinction trials, participants received only the auditory stimulus but in different sensorimotor states corresponding to their group: 1) during normal active balance, 2) while immobilized, and 3) throughout periods where the computer subtly removed active control over balance. In the balancing and immobilized states, conditioned responses were either evoked or suppressed, respectively, according to the (in)ability to control movement. Following the immobilized state, conditioned responses were renewed when balance was restored, indicating that conditioning was retained but only expressed when contextually relevant. In contrast, conditioned responses persisted in the computer-controlled state even though there was no causal relationship between motor and sensory signals. These findings suggest that mechanisms responsible for sensory-evoked and conditioned postural responses do not share a single, central contextual inference and assessment of their relevance to postural control, and may instead operate in parallel.
人类的站立平衡依赖于对感觉信号的持续监测和整合,以推断我们的身体在环境中的运动和方向。然而,当感觉信息不再与平衡身体相关(例如,当感觉和运动信号不一致时),感觉诱发的平衡反应会被迅速抑制,远早于对平衡控制变化的任何有意识感知。在这里,我们使用机器人平衡模拟器来评估联想性习得的姿势反应是否同样受到感觉运动不一致和对姿势控制的上下文相关性的调节。三组共 29 名参与者接受经典条件作用训练,以便在接收到最初中性的声音提示时对全身扰动产生姿势反应。在捕获和消退试验中,参与者只收到听觉刺激,但处于与他们的组相对应的不同感觉运动状态:1)在正常主动平衡时,2)在固定不动时,3)在计算机微妙地移除平衡主动控制的整个期间。在平衡和固定状态下,根据(是否)能够控制运动,条件反应分别被诱发或抑制。在固定状态之后,当恢复平衡时,条件反应会重新出现,这表明条件作用得到了保留,但仅在相关时才表达。相比之下,即使运动和感觉信号之间没有因果关系,条件反应在计算机控制状态下仍然持续存在。这些发现表明,负责感觉诱发和条件性姿势反应的机制并不共享单一的中央上下文推断,并且对其与姿势控制的相关性进行评估,并且可能并行运作。