Adaptive adjustments of strategies help optimize behavior in a dynamic and uncertain world. Previous studies in the countermanding (or stop-signal) paradigm have detailed how reaction times (RTs) change with trial sequence, demonstrating adaptive control of movement generation. Comparatively little is known about the adaptive control of movement cancellation in the countermanding task, mainly because movement cancellation implies the absence of an outcome and estimates of movement cancellation require hundreds of trials. Here, we exploit a within-trial proxy of movement cancellation based on recordings of neck muscle activity while human subjects attempted to cancel large eye-head gaze shifts. On a subset of successfully cancelled trials where gaze remains stable, small head-only movements to the target are actively braked by a pulse of antagonist neck muscle activity. The timing of such antagonist muscle recruitment relative to the stop signal, termed the "antagonist latency," tended to decrease or increase after trials with or without a stop-signal, respectively. Over multiple time scales, fluctuations in the antagonist latency tended to be the mirror opposite of those occurring contemporaneously with RTs. These results provide new insights into the adaptive control of movement cancellation at an unprecedented resolution, suggesting it can be as prone to dynamic adjustment as movement generation. Adaptive control in the countermanding task appears to be governed by a dynamic balance between movement cancellation and generation: shifting the balance in favor of movement cancellation slows movement generation, whereas shifting the balance in favor of movement generation slows movement cancellation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6618397PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2543-12.2013DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

movement cancellation
36
adaptive control
16
movement generation
16
movement
13
countermanding task
12
control movement
12
cancellation
9
adjustment movement
8
cancellation generation
8
neck muscle
8

Similar Publications

Omnidirectional Wireless Power Transfer for Millimetric Magnetoelectric Biomedical Implants.

IEEE J Solid-State Circuits

November 2024

Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Rice University, Houston TX, 77005, USA.

Miniature bioelectronic implants promise revolutionary therapies for cardiovascular and neurological disorders. Wireless power transfer (WPT) is a significant method for miniaturization, eliminating the need for bulky batteries in today's devices. Despite successful demonstrations of millimetric battery-free implants in animal models, the robustness and efficiency of WPT are known to degrade significantly under misalignment incurred by body movements, respiration, heart beating, and limited control of implant orientation during surgery.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Selectively stopping individual parts of planned or ongoing movements is an everyday motor skill. For example, while walking in public you may stop yourself from waving at a stranger who you mistook for a friend while continuing to walk. Despite its ubiquity, our ability to selectively stop actions is limited.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Response inhibition is crucial for cognitive function, with key brain regions involved being the presupplementary motor area (preSMA) and the right inferior frontal cortex (rIFC), though their specific roles are debated.
  • Using fMRI, this study examined how these regions contribute to stopping responses during tasks designed to measure inhibitory control, specifically the Go/No-Go task and the Stop Signal Task.
  • Findings indicated that the rIFC is linked to pausing responses, while the preSMA is more directly involved in stopping responses effectively, supporting the Pause-then-Cancel Model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Commentary on "Social protection and the International Monetary Fund: promise versus performance" by Alexander Kentikelenis and Thomas Stubbs.

Global Health

January 2025

Department of Global Health Hans Rosling Center, University of Washington, 3980 15th Ave NE, Seattle, Seattle, WA, 98105, USA.

Background: The Covid pandemic and its aftermath have triggered new alarm and social unrest across the Global South over the deepening international debt crisis that now threatens to derail Universal Health Coverage (UHC), other Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), future pandemic preparedness, and global warming mitigation. The recent Globalization and Health article by Alex Kentikelenis and Thomas Stubbs (May 2024), "Social protection and the International Monetary Fund: promise versus performance", offers a meticulously quantified rendering of the social costs imposed by the crisis and takes aim at IMF solutions. They advocate for a rejection of IMF austerity programs and offer a valuable prescription for change through the International Labor Organization's "Universal Social Protection" concept.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Immersive virtual reality to assess unilateral spatial neglect in stroke patients: a preliminary study.

J Rehabil Med

January 2025

Faculty of Human Movement Sciences, Laboratory of Applied Biology and Research Unit in Applied Neurophysiology (LABNeuro), Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium.

Objectives: The conventional test to detect unilateral spatial neglect (USN) is the Bells Test performed in a paper-and-pencil format. While several studies showed immersive virtual reality (VR) tests may provide greater sensitivity in revealing the presence of USN using visual scanning tasks, none has investigated the Bells Test in VR. This study compares the Bells Test performed in paper-and-pencil format (PP) and in VR in conventional (CVR) and ecological (EVR) format, which differ by the size of the display, in stroke patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!