Abstract
AbstractSeveral sensorimotor control studies have provided evidence supporting that the central nervous system optimizes gravity’s effects to minimize muscle effort. Recently, this hypothesis has been supported by the consistent observation of direction-specific negative epochs in the phasic electromyographic signal of antigravity muscles during vertical arm movements. This suggests that gravity torque is harvested to produce some of the arm’s motion. However, further investigation is needed to more finely understand how the CNS integrates gravity effects into muscle commands. Here, we aimed to analyze the phasic muscular activity across varying movement speeds during horizontal and vertical arm movements. We quantified the amount of negativity during acceleration and deceleration phases for all movement directions during fast, natural, and slow movements. We found that the negativity was more important during the acceleration phase of downward movements and during the deceleration phase of upward movements, resulting in diminished phasic activity compared to horizontal movements. Concomitantly, we found direction-specific effects of movement speed on phasic EMG activity of gravity muscles. This resulted in altered EMG to kinematics relationships in vertical movements compared to horizontal ones. These results support theEffort-minimization hypothesisand confirm that the negativity of phasic EMG is an important aspect of the motor command. Furthermore, the present results reveal that the CNS finely tunes this feature across a range of movement speeds and directions.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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