4.4 Article

The long-latency reflex is composed of at least two functionally independent processes

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
卷 106, 期 1, 页码 449-459

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.01052.2010

关键词

upper limb; feedback; background load; intent; spatial target

资金

  1. National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Canadian Institute of Health Research
  3. Ontario Graduate Program

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Pruszynski JA, Kurtzer I, Scott SH. The long-latency reflex is composed of at least two functionally independent processes. J Neurophysiol 106: 449-459, 2011. First published May 4, 2011; doi:10.1152/jn.01052.2010.-The nervous system counters mechanical perturbations applied to the arm with a stereotypical sequence of muscle activity, starting with the short-latency stretch reflex and ending with a voluntary response. Occurring between these two events is the enigmatic long-latency reflex. Although researchers have been fascinated by the long-latency reflex for over 60 years, some of the most basic questions about this response remain unresolved and often debated. In the present study we help resolve one such question by providing clear evidence that the human long-latency reflex during a naturalistic motor task is not a single functional response; rather, it appears to reflect the output of (at least) two functionally independent processes that overlap in time and sum linearly. One of these functional components shares an important attribute of the short-latency reflex (i.e., automatic gain scaling, sensitivity to background load), and the other shares a defining feature of voluntary control (i.e., task dependency, sensitivity to goal target position). We further show that the task-dependent component of long-latency activity reflects a feedback control process rather than the simplest triggered reaction to a mechanical stimulus.

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