4.4 Article

Reaching to Multiple Targets When Standing: The Spatial Organization of Feedforward Postural Adjustments

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 101, Issue 4, Pages 2120-2133

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.91135.2008

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Canadian Foundation for Innovation/New Opportunities Fund [10613]
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council Individual Discovery

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Leonard JA, Brown RH, Stapley PJ. Reaching to multiple targets when standing: the spatial organization of feedforward postural adjustments. J Neurophysiol 101: 2120-2133, 2009. First published February 11, 2009; doi:10.1152/jn.91135.2008. We examined the spatial organization of feedforward postural adjustments produced prior to and during voluntary arm reaching movements executed while standing. We sought to investigate whether the activity of postural muscles before and during reaching was directionally tuned and whether a strategy of horizontal force constraint could be observed. To this end, eight human subjects executed self-paced reach-to-point movements on the random illumination of one of 13 light targets placed within a 180 array centered along the midline of the body. Analysis was divided into two periods: a first corresponding to the 250 ms preceding the onset of the reaching movements ( termed pPA period) and a second 250-ms period immediately preceding target attainment ( the aPA period). For both periods, electromyographic activity of the lower limb muscles revealed a clear directional tuning, with groups of muscles being activated for similar directions of reach. Analysis of horizontal ground reaction forces supported the existence of a force constraint strategy only for the pPA period, however, with those in the aPA period being more widely dispersed. We suggest that the strategy adopted for feedforward pPAs is one where the tuned muscle synergies constrain the forces diagonally away from the center of mass (CoM) to move it within the support base. However, the need to control for final finger and body position for each target during the aPA phase resulted in a distribution of vectors across reaching directions. Overall, our results would support the idea that endpoint limb force during postural tasks depends on the use of functional muscle synergies, which are used to displace the CoM or decelerate the body at the end of the reach.

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