Gracco V L, Abbs J H
J Neurophysiol. 1985 Aug;54(2):418-32. doi: 10.1152/jn.1985.54.2.418.
Afferent contributions to the motor control of speech were evaluated by applying unanticipated loads to the lower lip during the combined upper lip-lower lip gesture associated with the oral closing movements for a "b" sound. Loads were introduced randomly in approximately 15% of the trials to minimize subject anticipation or adaptation. A total of 490 load trials (in five naive subjects) were distributed within a restricted interval (100 ms) centered on the initiation of agonist muscle contraction associated with the lip-closing movements. Kinematic adjustments of the upper and lower lips to these perturbations were examined in detail. In all subjects, load-induced changes in upper and lower lip displacement, movement time, and closing velocity were statistically significant and observed the first time a perturbation was introduced. Load timing variations within the target interval resulted in systematic changes in the site of the compensatory adjustments (upper versus lower lip) and in the magnitude of the kinematic responses. These kinematic changes appeared to reflect the dynamic nature of underlying control processes and clearly contrasted the different response characteristics of autogenic (lower lip) and nonautogenic (upper lip) compensatory actions. Although both upper and lower lip adjustments contributed to perturbation compensations, autogenic responses were found to predominate when loads occurred 20-55 ms before muscle activation. For these early loads, autogenic responses provided approximately 75% of the total compensation. For later loads, when the evolving speech motor action was more time constrained, nonautogenic (open-loop) compensations predominated, providing approximately 65% of the total compensation. The variations in upper and lower lip compensatory response magnitude did not parallel the time course of facial muscle activation. Lower lip kinematic adjustments were reduced 10-15 ms prior to the onset of agonist muscle activation, whereas upper lip adjustments increased in magnitude 10-20 ms after agonist onset. Apparently the dynamic modulation of these responses is controlled independently from facial motoneuron excitation, possibly involving sensorimotor processing via supranuclear centers. Overall the compensatory movement displacements were highly related to the magnitude of the perturbation displacement, especially for loads introduced prior to agonist muscle onset, reflecting a well-calibrated readjustment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
在与发“b”音时口腔闭合动作相关的上唇-下唇联合动作过程中,通过向下唇施加意外负载来评估传入神经对言语运动控制的贡献。在大约15%的试验中随机引入负载,以尽量减少受试者的预期或适应。在以与唇闭合动作相关的主动肌收缩开始为中心的受限时间间隔(100毫秒)内,总共进行了490次负载试验(涉及5名未受过训练的受试者)。详细检查了上下唇对这些扰动的运动学调整。在所有受试者中,负载引起的上下唇位移、运动时间和闭合速度的变化具有统计学意义,并且在首次引入扰动时就被观察到。目标时间间隔内的负载时间变化导致补偿调整部位(上唇与下唇)以及运动学反应幅度的系统性变化。这些运动学变化似乎反映了潜在控制过程的动态性质,并且明显对比了自生(下唇)和非自生(上唇)补偿动作的不同反应特征。尽管上下唇调整都有助于扰动补偿,但当负载在肌肉激活前20 - 55毫秒出现时,发现自生反应占主导。对于这些早期负载,自生反应提供了约75%的总补偿。对于后期负载,当不断发展的言语运动动作受到更多时间限制时,非自生(开环)补偿占主导,提供了约65%的总补偿。上下唇补偿反应幅度的变化与面部肌肉激活的时间进程并不平行。下唇运动学调整在主动肌激活开始前10 - 15毫秒减少,而上唇调整在主动肌激活开始后10 - 20毫秒幅度增加。显然,这些反应的动态调制是独立于面部运动神经元兴奋进行控制的,可能涉及通过核上中枢的感觉运动处理。总体而言,补偿运动位移与扰动位移的大小高度相关,特别是对于在主动肌开始前引入的负载,这反映了良好校准的重新调整。(摘要截断于400字)