4.7 Article

Neural control of motion-to-force transitions with the fingertip

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 6, Pages 1366-1373

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4993-07.2008

Keywords

motor control; neural control; finger; hand; contact transition; force

Categories

Funding

  1. NIAMS NIH HHS [AR050520, R01 AR052345-02, R01 AR050520-01A1, AR052345, R01 AR050520, R01 AR052345] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NICHD NIH HHS [R21 HD048566, HD048566] Funding Source: Medline

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The neural control of tasks such as rapid acquisition of precision pinch remains unknown. Therefore, we investigated the neural control of finger musculature when the index fingertip abruptly transitions from motion to static force production. Nine subjects produced a downward tapping motion followed by vertical fingertip force against a rigid surface. We simultaneously recorded three-dimensional fingertip force, plus the complete muscle coordination pattern using intramuscular electromyograms from all seven index finger muscles. We found that the muscle coordination pattern clearly switched from that for motion to that for isometric force similar to 65 ms before contact (p = 0.0004). Mathematical modeling and analysis revealed that the underlying neural control also switched between mutually incompatible strategies in a time-critical manner. Importantly, this abrupt switch in underlying neural control polluted fingertip force vector direction beyond what is explained by muscle activation-contraction dynamics and neuromuscular noise (p <= 0.003). We further ruled out an impedance control strategy in a separate test showing no systematic change in initial force magnitude for catch trials where the tapping surface was surreptitiously lowered and raised (p = 0.93). We conclude that the nervous system predictively switches between mutually incompatible neural control strategies to bridge the abrupt transition in mechanical constraints between motion and static force. Moreover because the nervous system cannot switch between control strategies instantaneously or exactly, there arise physical limits to the accuracy of force production on contact. The need for such a neurally demanding and time-critical strategy for routine motion-to-force transitions with the fingertip may explain the existence of specialized neural circuits for the human hand.

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