Affiliation:
1. Institut des Sciences du Mouvement “Etienne-Jules Marey,” CNRS and Aix-Marseille Université and
2. Laboratoire de Neurosciences Cognitives-CNRS and Aix-Marseille Université, Marseille; and
3. Institut de Médecine et de Physiologie Spatiales/Clinique Spatiale, MEDES-IMPS-BP 74404, Toulouse, France
Abstract
Gravitational force level is well-known to influence arm motor control. Specifically, hyper- or microgravity environments drastically change pointing accuracy and kinematics, particularly during initial exposure. These modifications are thought to partly reflect impairment in arm position sense. Here we investigated whether applying normogravitational constraints at joint level during microgravity episodes of parabolic flights could restore movement accuracy equivalent to that observed on Earth. Subjects with eyes closed performed arm reaching movements toward predefined sagittal angular positions in four environment conditions: normogravity, hypergravity, microgravity, and microgravity with elastic bands attached to the arm to mimic gravity-like torque at the shoulder joint. We found that subjects overshot and undershot the target orientations in hypergravity and microgravity, respectively, relative to a normogravity baseline. Strikingly, adding gravity-like torque prior to and during movements performed in microgravity allowed subjects to be as accurate as in normogravity. In the former condition, arm movement kinematics, as notably illustrated by the relative time to peak velocity, were also unchanged relative to normogravity, whereas significant modifications were found in hyper- and microgravity. Overall, these results suggest that arm motor planning and control are tuned with respect to gravitational information issued from joint torque, which presumably enhances arm position sense and activates internal models optimally adapted to the gravitoinertial environment.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
45 articles.
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