Bock O
Human Performance Lab, York University, Ont., Canada.
Aviat Space Environ Med. 1994 Jul;65(7):621-6.
The proprioceptive position sense was investigated in an elbow-angle matching task in which the right forearm was moved passively by an experimenter and the left forearm actively by the subject. The right forearm could be immersed in water or loaded with a weight, to simulate micro- and hypergravity. We found that in simulated microgravity, matching performance was more variable than in normal gravity, and the right forearm deviated systematically upwards. The latter finding was limited to near-horizontal forearm positions (i.e., where the anticipated effects of gravity are strongest), and could be "reset" by intermittent visual feedback. The observed impairments of the proprioceptive position sense may adversely affect the manual performance of astronauts. In simulated hypergravity, we found no changes of variability and no systematic deviations. This outcome confirms our previous results that weight compensation is efficient even when only static (i.e., gravitational) cues are available.
在一项肘部角度匹配任务中对本体感受位置觉进行了研究,在该任务中,实验者被动移动受试者的右前臂,受试者主动移动左前臂。右前臂可以浸入水中或加载重物,以模拟微重力和超重力。我们发现,在模拟微重力环境下,匹配性能比在正常重力环境下更具变异性,并且右前臂会系统性地向上偏移。后一发现仅限于前臂接近水平的位置(即重力预期影响最强的位置),并且可以通过间歇性视觉反馈“重置”。观察到的本体感受位置觉损伤可能会对宇航员的手动操作产生不利影响。在模拟超重力环境下,我们发现变异性没有变化,也没有系统性偏差。这一结果证实了我们之前的结果,即即使仅提供静态(即重力)线索,重量补偿也是有效的。