4.4 Article

Evidence for constancy in the modularity of trunk muscle activity preceding reaching: implications for the role of preparatory postural activity

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 126, Issue 5, Pages 1465-1477

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00093.2021

Keywords

coordination; motor module/synergy; postural adjustment; reach; trunk muscles

Funding

  1. Australian Government Postgraduate Award
  2. National Stroke Foundation of Australia
  3. NIH [R01 HD46922]

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Postural muscle activity precedes voluntary upper limb movements and may be more related to generating movement goals rather than stability. Despite changing postural constraints, functional muscle weightings and spatial tuning in trunk muscles remain constant across tasks of varying trunk involvement.
Postural muscle activity precedes voluntary movements of the upper limbs. The traditional view of this activity is that it anticipates perturbations to balance caused by the movement of a limb. However, findings from reach-based paradigms have shown that postural adjustments can initiate center of mass displacement for mobility rather than minimize its displacement for stability. Within this context, altering reaching distance beyond the base of support would place increasing constraints on equilibrium during stance. If the underlying composition of anticipatory postural activity is linked to stability, coordination between muscles (i.e., motor modules) may evolve differently as equilibrium constraints increase. We analyzed the composition of motor modules in functional trunk muscles as participants performed multidirectional reaching movements to targets within and beyond the arm's length. Bilateral trunk and reaching arm muscle activity were recorded. Despite different trunk requirements necessary for successful movement, and the changing biomechanical (i.e., postural) constraints that accompany alterations in reach distance, nonnegative matrix factorization identified functional motor modules derived from preparatory trunk muscle activity that shared common features. Relative similarity in modular weightings (i.e., composition) and spatial activation profiles that reflect movement goals across tasks necessitating differing levels of trunk involvement provides evidence that preparatory postural adjustments are linked to the same task priorities (i.e., movement generation rather than stability). NEW & NOTEWORTHY Reaching within and beyond arm's length places different task constraints upon the required trunk motion necessary for successful movement execution. The identification of constant modular features, including functional muscle weightings and spatial tuning, lend support to the notion that preparatory postural adjustments of the trunk are tied to the same task priorities driving mobility, regardless of the future postural constraints.

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