由内在和外在坐标上的合作相互作用控制的双手运动协调

Takeshi Sakurada, Koji Ito, H. Gomi
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引用次数: 8

摘要

虽然内在肌肉坐标的强烈运动协调经常被报道为双手运动,但外在视觉坐标的协调在各种双手任务中也至关重要。为了从参照系的角度探讨双手协调机制,我们对视觉运动任务中的内隐双边互动进行了表征。当参与者在外部坐标中以同相或反相关系使用两个食指进行有节奏的跟踪任务时,施加视觉扰动(手指-光标增益变化)。当他们纠正右手手指的振幅时,尽管指示保持其振幅不变,但左手手指的振幅也无意中发生了变化[运动干扰(MI)]。值得注意的是,我们观察到两个特异性:一个是内在同相条件下的大MI和低相对相变异性(PV),另一个是外在同相条件下的大MI和高PV。此外,利用多重交互模型,我们成功地将MI分解为由运动校正引起的内在成分和由右手指运动的视觉光标不匹配引起的外在成分。该分析表明,中枢神经系统通过将内源性和外源性成分与内源性和外源性坐标相结合来促进MI的发生,并且大脑对内源性相互作用比对外源性相互作用的偏好可以解释这种效应的低加性。相比之下,PV与内在成分显著相关,表明内在相互作用对双手运动稳定起主要作用。MI和PV的不一致特征表明,中枢神经系统调节了各种手工任务的多个水平的双边相互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bimanual motor coordination controlled by cooperative interactions in intrinsic and extrinsic coordinates
Although strong motor coordination in intrinsic muscle coordinates has frequently been reported for bimanual movements, coordination in extrinsic visual coordinates is also crucial in various bimanual tasks. To explore the bimanual coordination mechanisms in terms of the frame of reference, here we characterized implicit bilateral interactions in visuomotor tasks. Visual perturbations (finger‐cursor gain change) were applied while participants performed a rhythmic tracking task with both index fingers under an in‐phase or anti‐phase relationship in extrinsic coordinates. When they corrected the right finger's amplitude, the left finger's amplitude unintentionally also changed [motor interference (MI)], despite the instruction to keep its amplitude constant. Notably, we observed two specificities: one was large MI and low relative‐phase variability (PV) under the intrinsic in‐phase condition, and the other was large MI and high PV under the extrinsic in‐phase condition. Additionally, using a multiple‐interaction model, we successfully decomposed MI into intrinsic components caused by motor correction and extrinsic components caused by visual‐cursor mismatch of the right finger's movements. This analysis revealed that the central nervous system facilitates MI by combining intrinsic and extrinsic components in the condition with in‐phases in both intrinsic and extrinsic coordinates, and that under‐additivity of the effects is explained by the brain's preference for the intrinsic interaction over extrinsic interaction. In contrast, the PV was significantly correlated with the intrinsic component, suggesting that the intrinsic interaction dominantly contributed to bimanual movement stabilization. The inconsistent features of MI and PV suggest that the central nervous system regulates multiple levels of bilateral interactions for various bimanual tasks.
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