Hand trajectory invariance in reaching movements involving the trunk

被引:82
|
作者
Adamovich, SV
Archambault, PS
Ghafouri, M
Levin, MF
Poizner, H
Feldman, AG
机构
[1] Rutgers State Univ, Ctr Mol & Behav Neurosci, Newark, NJ 07102 USA
[2] Russian Acad Sci, Inst Informat Transmiss Problems, Moscow 101447, Russia
[3] Univ Montreal, Dept Physiol, Montreal, PQ H3S 2J4, Canada
[4] Rehabil Inst Montreal, Res Ctr, Montreal, PQ H3S 2J4, Canada
关键词
movement synergies; transport component; compensatory arm-trunk coordination; pointing; interjoint coordination;
D O I
10.1007/s002210100694
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Movements of different body segments may be combined in different ways to achieve the same motor goal. How this is accomplished by the nervous system was investigated by having subjects make fast pointing movements with the arm in combination with a forward bending of the trunk that was unexpectedly blocked in some trials. Subjects moved their hand above the surface of a table without vision from an initial position near the midline of the chest to remembered targets placed within the reach of the arm in either the ipsi- or contralateral workspace. In experiment 1, subjects were instructed to make fast arm movements to the target without corrections whether or not the trunk was arrested. Only minor changes were found in the hand trajectory and velocity profile in response to the trunk arrest, and these changes were seen only late in the movement. In contrast, the patterns of the interjoint coordination substantially changed in response to the trunk arrest, suggesting the presence of compensatory arm-trunk coordination minimizing the deflections from the hand trajectory regardless of whether the trunk is recruited or mechanically blocked. Changes in the arm interjoint coordination in response to the trunk arrest could be detected kinematically at a minimal latency of 50 ms. This finding suggests a rapid reflex compensatory mechanism driven by vestibular and/or proprioceptive afferent signals. In experiment 2, subjects were required, as soon as they perceived the trunk arrest, to change the hand motion to the same direction as that of the trunk. Under this instruction, subjects were able to initiate corrections only after the hand approached or reached the final position. Thus, centrally mediated compensatory corrections triggered in response to the trunk arrest were Likely to occur too: late to maintain the observed invariant hand trajectory in experiment 1. In experiment 3, subjects produced similar pointing movements, but to a target that moved together with the trunk. In these body-oriented pointing movements, the hand trajectories from trials in which the trunk was moving or arrested were substantially different. The same trajectories represented in a relative frame of reference moving with the trunk were virtually identical. We conclude that hand trajectory invariance can be produced in an external spatial (experiment 1) or an internal trunk-centered (experiment 3) frame of reference. The invariance in the external frame of reference is accomplished by active compensatory changes in the arm joint angles nullifying the influence of the trunk motion on the hand trajectory. We suggest that to make a transition to the internal frame of reference, control systems suppress this compensation. One of the hypotheses opened to further experimental testing is that the integration of additional (trunk) degrees of freedom into movement is based on afferent (proprioceptive, vestibular) signals stemming from the trunk motion and transmitted to the arm muscles.
引用
收藏
页码:288 / 303
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Hand trajectory invariance in reaching movements involving the trunk
    Sergei V. Adamovich
    Philippe S. Archambault
    Mohammad Ghafouri
    Mindy F. Levin
    Howard Poizner
    Anatol G. Feldman
    Experimental Brain Research, 2001, 138 : 288 - 303
  • [2] Improvement in Hand Trajectory of Reaching Movements by Error-Augmentation
    Israely, Sharon
    Leisman, Gerry
    Carmeli, Eli
    PROGRESS IN MEDICAL RESEARCH, 2018, 1070 : 71 - 84
  • [3] 2 FUNCTIONALLY DIFFERENT SYNERGIES DURING ARM REACHING MOVEMENTS INVOLVING THE TRUNK
    MA, S
    FELDMAN, AG
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1995, 73 (05) : 2120 - 2122
  • [4] Hand trajectory formation during whole body reaching movements in man
    Pozzo, T
    McIntyre, J
    Cheron, G
    Papaxanthis, C
    NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 1998, 240 (03) : 159 - 162
  • [5] The relativity of reaching: Motion of the touched surface alters the trajectory of hand movements
    Ryan, Colleen P.
    Ciotti, Simone
    Balestrucci, Priscilla
    Bicchi, Antonio
    Lacquaniti, Francesco
    Bianchi, Matteo
    Moscatelli, Alessandro
    ISCIENCE, 2024, 27 (06)
  • [6] IS A VIRTUAL TRAJECTORY NECESSARY IN REACHING MOVEMENTS
    HATSOPOULOS, NG
    BIOLOGICAL CYBERNETICS, 1994, 70 (06) : 541 - 551
  • [7] Mouse Arm and hand movements in grooming are reaching movements: Evolution of reaching, handedness, and the thumbnail
    Naghizadeh, Milad
    Mohajerani, Majid H.
    Whishaw, Ian Q.
    BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 2020, 393
  • [8] Effect of trunk restraint on the recovery of reaching movements in hemiparetic patients
    Michaelsen, SM
    Luta, A
    Roby-Brami, A
    Levin, MF
    STROKE, 2001, 32 (08) : 1875 - 1883
  • [9] Coordination Deficits of Arm and Trunk Movements During Reaching in Stroke
    Banina, Melanie C.
    Sviestrup, Heidi
    Finestone, Hillel
    Subramanian, Sandeep K.
    Khanafer, Sajida
    Sambasivan, Krithika
    Feldman, Anatol G.
    Levin, Mindy F.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF STROKE, 2016, 11 : 31 - 32
  • [10] Postural invariance in three-dimensional reaching and grasping movements
    Gréa, H
    Desmurget, M
    Prablanc, C
    EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, 2000, 134 (02) : 155 - 162