High-fidelity musculoskeletal modeling reveals that motor planning variability contributes to the speed-accuracy tradeoff

Author:

Al Borno Mazen12ORCID,Vyas Saurabh1,Shenoy Krishna V13456,Delp Scott L17

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

2. Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, United States

3. Neurosciences Program, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

4. Department of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

5. Wu Tsai Neuroscience Institute, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

6. Department of Neurobiology, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

7. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, United States

Abstract

A long-standing challenge in motor neuroscience is to understand the relationship between movement speed and accuracy, known as the speed-accuracy tradeoff. Here, we introduce a biomechanically realistic computational model of three-dimensional upper extremity movements that reproduces well-known features of reaching movements. This model revealed that the speed-accuracy tradeoff, as described by Fitts’ law, emerges even without the presence of motor noise, which is commonly believed to underlie the speed-accuracy tradeoff. Next, we analyzed motor cortical neural activity from monkeys reaching to targets of different sizes. We found that the contribution of preparatory neural activity to movement duration (MD) variability is greater for smaller targets than larger targets, and that movements to smaller targets exhibit less variability in population-level preparatory activity, but greater MD variability. These results propose a new theory underlying the speed-accuracy tradeoff: Fitts’ law emerges from greater task demands constraining the optimization landscape in a fashion that reduces the number of ‘good’ control solutions (i.e., faster reaches). Thus, contrary to current beliefs, the speed-accuracy tradeoff could be a consequence of motor planning variability and not exclusively signal-dependent noise.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

National Institute of Mental Health

Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency

Simons Foundation

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

National Science Foundation

Stanford University

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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