4.5 Article

Voluntary motor commands reveal awareness and control of involuntary movement

Journal

COGNITION
Volume 155, Issue -, Pages 155-167

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2016.06.012

Keywords

Motor control; Involuntary movement; Inhibition; Action awareness; Bilateral movement; Negative motor command

Funding

  1. UCL
  2. NTT
  3. UCL Impact studentship
  4. ERC Advanced grant HUMVOL
  5. Society in Science
  6. Branco Weiss Fellowship
  7. Vontobel Stiftung

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The capacity to inhibit actions is central to voluntary motor control. However, the control mechanisms and subjective experience involved in voluntarily stopping an involuntary movement remain poorly understood. Here we examined, in humans, the voluntary inhibition of the Kohnstamm phenomenon, in which sustained voluntary contraction of shoulder abductors is followed by involuntary arm raising. Participants were instructed to stop the involuntary movement, hold the arm in a constant position, and 'release' the inhibition after similar to 2 s. Participants achieved this by modulating agonist muscle activity, rather than by antagonist contraction. Specifically, agonist muscle activity plateaued during this voluntary inhibition, and resumed its previous increase thereafter. There was no discernible antagonist activation. Thus, some central signal appeared to temporarily counter the involuntary motor drive, without directly affecting the Kohnstamm generator itself. We hypothesise a form of negative motor command to account for this novel finding. We next tested the specificity of the negative motor command, by inducing bilateral Kohnstamm movements, and instructing voluntary inhibition for one arm only. The results suggested negative motor commands responsible for inhibition are initially broad, affecting both arms, and then become focused. Finally, a psychophysical investigation found that the perceived force of the aftercontraction was significantly overestimated, relative to voluntary contractions with similar EMG levels. This finding is consistent with the hypothesis that the Kohnstamm generator does not provide an efference copy signal. Our results shed new light on this interesting class of involuntary movement, and provide new information about voluntary inhibition of action. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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