Gentilucci M, Toni I, Chieffi S, Pavesi G
Institute of Human Physiology, University of Parma, Italy.
Exp Brain Res. 1994;99(3):483-500. doi: 10.1007/BF00228985.
In this study we investigated the role of proprioception in the control of prehension movements, with particular reference to the grasp component. Grasp and transport kinematics were studied in a peripherally deafferented patient and in five healthy subjects. Two experiments were carried out: the prehension experiment and the grasp perturbation experiment. In the prehension experiment both the patient and the control subjects were required to reach and grasp three objects of different size, located at three different distances, both with and without visual feedback. In the grasp perturbation experiment a mechanical perturbation was applied to the fingers during prehension movements, again executed with and without visual feedback. In the prehension experiment temporal parameters of the patient's movements were generally slowed, with greater variability on some measures. However, over the first phase of the movement the pattern of the patient's hand opening and transport acceleration, scaled to object size and distance, was the same as that of controls, both with and without visual feedback. On the contrary, during the final phase of the movement (the finger closure phase and deceleration) the patient's performance differed significantly from the controls. These phases were abnormally lengthened and frequent movement adjustments were observed. In the grasp perturbation experiment the patient was not able to compensate for the perturbations applied to the fingers, even with visual feedback. The data allowed us to investigate also the respective contribution of proprioception and of vision of the hand in the control of prehension. We compared prehension kinematics in two conditions: (a) with visual but no proprioceptive feedback (in the patient) and (b) with proprioceptive but no visual feedback (in the controls). In both experiments proprioceptive control was more efficient than visual control. The results of this study are interpreted in favour of the strict dependence of prehension control on proprioception. The first phase of the movement, however, can be appropriately planned and executed without the necessity of either proprioceptive or visual information about the hand.
在本研究中,我们调查了本体感觉在抓握动作控制中的作用,尤其关注抓握部分。我们对一名外周去传入神经的患者和五名健康受试者的抓握与运输运动学进行了研究。进行了两个实验:抓握实验和抓握扰动实验。在抓握实验中,要求患者和对照受试者在有视觉反馈和无视觉反馈的情况下,伸手抓取位于三个不同距离处的三个不同大小的物体。在抓握扰动实验中,在抓握动作过程中对手指施加机械扰动,同样在有视觉反馈和无视觉反馈的情况下执行。在抓握实验中,患者动作的时间参数通常会减慢,某些测量值的变异性更大。然而,在运动的第一阶段,患者手部张开和运输加速的模式,根据物体大小和距离进行缩放后,无论有无视觉反馈,都与对照组相同。相反,在运动的最后阶段(手指闭合阶段和减速阶段),患者的表现与对照组有显著差异。这些阶段异常延长,并且观察到频繁的动作调整。在抓握扰动实验中,即使有视觉反馈,患者也无法补偿施加在手指上的扰动。这些数据还使我们能够研究本体感觉和手部视觉在抓握控制中的各自贡献。我们比较了两种情况下的抓握运动学:(a)有视觉但无本体感觉反馈(在患者中)和(b)有本体感觉但无视觉反馈(在对照组中)。在两个实验中,本体感觉控制都比视觉控制更有效。本研究结果被解释为支持抓握控制对本体感觉的严格依赖性。然而,运动的第一阶段可以在无需关于手部的本体感觉或视觉信息的情况下进行适当的规划和执行。