Conclusions on motor control depend on the type of model used to represent the periphery.

Biol Cybern

Research Institute MOVE, Faculty of Human Movement Sciences, VU University, Van der Boechorststraat 9, 1081 BT, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Published: October 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • There is ongoing debate in motor control research about which aspects of movement are actively planned and controlled, with perturbing goal-directed movements being a common method to explore this topic.
  • The study aimed to investigate how conclusions about motor control vary based on the simplification levels of peripheral models, which include the skeleton, muscles, and spinal reflexes.
  • Four different models of the periphery were simulated to test their responses to perturbations, revealing that each model had distinct levels of robustness and predictions regarding the accuracy required for motor commands in response to changes.

Article Abstract

Within the field of motor control, there is no consensus on which kinematic and kinetic aspects of movements are planned or controlled. Perturbing goal-directed movements is a frequently used tool to answer this question. To be able to draw conclusions about motor control from kinematic responses to perturbations, a model of the periphery (i.e., the skeleton, muscle-tendon complexes, and spinal reflex circuitry) is required. The purpose of the present study was to determine to what extent such conclusions depend on the level of simplification with which the dynamical properties of the periphery are modeled. For this purpose, we simulated fast goal-directed single-joint movement with four existing types of models. We tested how three types of perturbations affected movement trajectory if motor commands remained unchanged. We found that the four types of models of the periphery showed different robustness to the perturbations, leading to different predictions on how accurate motor commands need to be, i.e., how accurate the knowledge of external conditions needs to be. This means that when interpreting kinematic responses obtained in perturbation experiments the level of error correction attributed to adaptation of motor commands depends on the type of model used to describe the periphery.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00422-012-0505-7DOI Listing

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