The control of goal-directed arm movements performed during whole-body displacements is far from being understood. Recent studies suggested that the compensatory arm movements that allow individuals to preserve hand-in-space trajectory during unexpected body motion are controlled by sensorimotor, automatic- like processes. We tested this hypothesis comparing both the accuracy of movements directed towards body-fixed or Earth-fixed target during body rotations and the amount of interference of the reaching tasks on a concurrent cognitive task. Participants reached for a memorized 55 cm distant straight-ahead target in darkness which was about 20 cm lower than the initial finger position. The target was either body-fixed or Earth-fixed. At reaching onset, participants could be rotated in yaw. The concurrent task consisted of a verbal reaction time (RT) to an auditory stimulus. RTs increased when participants reached for the target while they were rotated. However, this increase was not significantly different for body-fixed and Earth-fixed targets. Reaching accuracy was greater for body-fixed than for Earth-fixed targets. A control experiment suggested that the errors in the Earth-fixed target condition arose from a difficulty in the organization of movements which necessitate both the production of active forces at the shoulder joint (to compensate for body rotation) and a concomitant decrease of muscular activation to lower the arm during reaching movements. These findings suggest that reaching for Earth-fixed or body-fixed targets during body rotation cannot be considered as being purely automatic tasks.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/mcj.10.4.330 | DOI Listing |
IEEE Trans Cybern
December 2022
This article investigates the roto-translation invariant (RTI) formation of multiple underactuated planar rigid bodies, which are established under the framework of matrix Lie groups. The main contribution is that we define the RTI and pseudo RTI (P-RTI) formation of planar rigid bodies. Different from the common formation given in the earth-fixed frame, the RTI formation is defined in the body-fixed frame so that it possesses a rigid-body motion obtained by composing rotation and translation simultaneously.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Physiol
February 2017
School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Birmingham, UK.
Key Points: Reaching movements can be perturbed by vestibular input, but the function of this response is unclear. Here, we applied galvanic vestibular stimulation concurrently with real body movement while subjects maintained arm position either fixed in space or fixed with respect to their body. During the fixed-in-space conditions, galvanic vestibular stimulation caused large changes in arm trajectory consistent with a compensatory response to maintain upper-limb accuracy in the face of body movement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Brain Res
May 2013
Department of Neurology, University Hospital Zurich, Frauenklinikstrasse 26, 8091, Zurich, Switzerland.
Body position relative to gravity is continuously updated to prevent falls. Therefore, the brain integrates input from the otoliths, truncal graviceptors, proprioception and vision. Without visual cues estimated direction of gravity mainly depends on otolith input and becomes more variable with increasing roll-tilt.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMotor Control
October 2006
UMR Mouvement & Perception, CNRS et Universite de la Mediterranee, Marseille, France.
The control of goal-directed arm movements performed during whole-body displacements is far from being understood. Recent studies suggested that the compensatory arm movements that allow individuals to preserve hand-in-space trajectory during unexpected body motion are controlled by sensorimotor, automatic- like processes. We tested this hypothesis comparing both the accuracy of movements directed towards body-fixed or Earth-fixed target during body rotations and the amount of interference of the reaching tasks on a concurrent cognitive task.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAuris Nasus Larynx
April 2002
Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Nagoya University School of Medicine, 65 Tsurumai-cho, Showa-ku, 466-8560, Nagoya, Japan.
Objective: To examine our hypothesis that an unusual floating or tilting sensation claimed by patients with long-standing unilateral vestibular loss might be attributed to incomplete central compensation in the otolith system.
Methods: Seven patients who were with or without symptoms for 6-101 months after intratympanic gentamicin therapy for unilateral endolymphatic hydrops were sinusoidally exposed to lateral linear acceleration, and their compensatory eye movements were compared with those of 18 normal controls, using electro-oculography (EOG). The subjects, secured firmly in the chair of a linear accelerator (sled), were oscillated at three different G-loadings of 0.
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