Abend W, Bizzi E, Morasso P
Brain. 1982 Jun;105(Pt 2):331-48. doi: 10.1093/brain/105.2.331.
In order to investigate the strategies used to plan and control multijoint arm trajectories, two-degrees-of-freedom arm movements performed by normal adult humans were recorded. Only the shoulder and elbow joints were active. When a subject was told simply to move his hand from one visual target to another, the path of the hand was roughly straight, and the hand speed profile of their straight trajectories was bell-shaped. When the subject was required to produce curved hand trajectories, the path usually had a segmented appearance, as if the subject was trying to approximate a curve with low curvature elements. Hand speed profiles associated with curved trajectories contained speed valleys or inflections which were temporally associated with the local maxima in the trajectory curvature. The mean duration of curved movements was longer than the mean for straight movements. These results are discussed in terms of trajectory control theories which have originated in the fields of mechanical manipulator control and biological motor control. Three explanations for the results are offered.
为了研究用于规划和控制多关节手臂轨迹的策略,记录了正常成年人进行的两自由度手臂运动。只有肩部和肘部关节活动。当受试者被告知简单地将手从一个视觉目标移动到另一个视觉目标时,手的路径大致是直的,并且他们直线轨迹的手速分布呈钟形。当受试者被要求产生弯曲的手部轨迹时,路径通常呈现出分段的外观,就好像受试者试图用低曲率元素来逼近一条曲线。与弯曲轨迹相关的手速分布包含速度谷或拐点,这些在时间上与轨迹曲率的局部最大值相关。弯曲运动的平均持续时间比直线运动的平均持续时间长。根据起源于机械操纵器控制和生物运动控制领域的轨迹控制理论对这些结果进行了讨论。针对这些结果提供了三种解释。