实现模拟重力:适应模拟低重力可改变预测控制

Chase G. Rock, Samuel T. Kwak, Angela Luo, Xiao Yang, Kristy Yun, Young-Hui Chang
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摘要

准确的预测能力对各种动物行为都很重要。许多预测都离不开对作为行为基础的物理学的理解。人类特别适应地球上的物理学,但也可以学习在其他环境(如月球表面)中移动。然而,人们并不完全了解在重力改变的情况下对基于物理学的预测所做的调整。本研究旨在描述运动适应模拟重力降低的新范例的特征。我们假设,暴露于模拟的低重力环境将导致基于重力的运动预测的更新。20 名参与者参加了一个方案,让他们在模拟低重力之前(PRE)、期间和之后(POST)进行有垂直目标的反向运动跳跃。在模拟低重力状态下跳跃的神经机理与前者不同,落地前的地面冲动减少(p ≤ .009),肌肉活动减少(即预激活;p ≤ .016)。在 1 g POST 条件下,肱三头肌的大多数肌肉的肌肉预激活仍然减少(p ≤ .033),延迟(p ≤ .008)达 33%,这反映了对低重力的预期。肌肉预激活的后效应,以及在接触地面时肌肉动态几乎没有变化,表明神经机械适应影响了预测、前馈系统,而不是反馈系统。因此,我们得出结论,在暴露于模拟低重力环境后,重力的神经表征或内部模型会得到更新。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Realizing the gravity of the simulation: adaptation to simulated hypogravity leads to altered predictive control
Accurate predictive abilities are important for a wide variety of animal behaviors. Inherent to many of these predictions is an understanding of the physics that underlie the behavior. Humans are specifically attuned to the physics on Earth but can learn to move in other environments (e.g., the surface of the Moon). However, the adjustments made to their physics-based predictions in the face of altered gravity are not fully understood. The current study aimed to characterize the locomotor adaptation to a novel paradigm for simulated reduced gravity. We hypothesized that exposure to simulated hypogravity would result in updated predictions of gravity-based movement. Twenty participants took part in a protocol that had them perform vertically targeted countermovement jumps before (PRE), during, and after (POST) a physical simulation of hypogravity. Jumping in simulated hypogravity had different neuromechanics from the PRE condition, with reduced ground impulses (p ≤ .009) and muscle activity prior to the time of landing (i.e., preactivation; p ≤ .016). In the 1 g POST condition, muscle preactivation remained reduced (p ≤ .033) and was delayed (p ≤ .008) by up to 33% for most muscles of the triceps surae, reflecting an expectation of hypogravity. The aftereffects in muscle preactivation, along with little-to-no change in muscle dynamics during ground contact, point to a neuromechanical adaptation that affects predictive, feed-forward systems over feedback systems. As such, we conclude that the neural representation, or internal model, of gravity is updated after exposure to simulated hypogravity.
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