4.4 Article

Role of muscle coactivation in adaptation of standing posture during arm reaching

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 123, Issue 2, Pages 529-547

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00939.2017

Keywords

anticipatory postural adjustment; coactivation; motor adaptation; neuromechanics; postural base of support

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [SES 1230933, SES 1352632, CMMI 1200830]
  2. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Young Faculty Award [D12AP00253]

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The ability to maintain stable, upright standing in the face of perturbations is a critical component of daily life. A common strategy for resisting perturbations and maintaining stability is muscle coactivation. Although arm muscle coactivation is often used during adaptation of seated reaching movements, little is known about postural muscle activation during concurrent adaptation of ann and standing posture to novel perturbations. In this study we investigate whether coactivation strategies are employed during adaptation of standing postural control, and how these strategies are prioritized for adaptation of standing posture and arm reaching, in two different postural stability conditions. Healthy adults practiced planar reaching movements while grasping the handle of a robotic arm and standing on a force plate; the robotic ann generated a velocity-dependent force field that created novel perturbations in the forward (more stable) or backward (less stable) direction. Surprisingly, the degree of arm and postural adaptation was not influenced by stability, with similar adaptation observed between conditions in the control of both arm movement and standing posture. We found that an early coactivation strategy can be used in postural adaptation. similar to what is observed in adaptation of arm reaching movements. However, the emergence of a coactivation strategy was dependent on perturbation direction. Despite similar adaptation in both directions, postural coactivation was largely specific to forward perturbations. Backward perturbations led to less coactivation and less modulation of postural muscle activity. These findings provide insight into bow postural stability can affect prioritization of postural control objectives and movement adaptation strategies. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Muscle coactivation is a key strategy for modulating movement stability; this is centrally important in the control of standing posture. Our study investigates the little-known role of coactivation in adaptation of whole body standing postural control. We demonstrate that an early coactivation strategy can be used in postural adaptation, but muscle activation strategies may differ depending on postural stability conditions.

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