Abstract

Discharge patterns from a population of motor units (MUs) were estimated with multi-channel surface electromyogram and signal processing techniques to investigate parametric differences in low-frequency force fluctuations, MU discharges, and force-discharge relation during static force-tracking with varying sizes of execution error presented via visual feedback. Fourteen healthy adults produced isometric force at 10% of maximal voluntary contraction through index abduction under three visual conditions that scaled execution errors with different amplification factors. Error-augmentation feedback that used a high amplification factor (HAF) to potentiate visualized error size resulted in higher sample entropy, mean frequency, ratio of high-frequency components, and spectral dispersion of force fluctuations than those of error-reducing feedback using a low amplification factor (LAF). In the HAF condition, MUs with relatively high recruitment thresholds in the dorsal interosseous muscle exhibited a larger coefficient of variation for inter-spike intervals and a greater spectral peak of the pooled MU coherence at 13–35 Hz than did those in the LAF condition. Manipulation of the size of error feedback altered the force-discharge relation, which was characterized with non-linear approaches such as mutual information and cross sample entropy. The association of force fluctuations and global discharge trace decreased with increasing error amplification factor. Our findings provide direct neurophysiological evidence that favors motor training using error-augmentation feedback. Amplification of the visualized error size of visual feedback could enrich force gradation strategies during static force-tracking, pertaining to selective increases in the discharge variability of higher-threshold MUs that receive greater common oscillatory inputs in the β-band.

Highlights

  • Force steadiness is a useful paradigm for investigating fine motor control and perceptuomotor variability [1, 2]

  • Motor unit discharge is a major determinant of force fluctuations [11, 12], the mean and coefficient of variation of the inter-spike interval of motor units of young adults are unexpectedly not tuned to visual spatial information [3, 13], except that Laine et al [14] reported that all spectral bands of the common oscillatory input to motor units varied with the spatial resolution of a visual display

  • Reduction in error feedback led to the smallest sample entropy (SampEn) of force fluctuations among the feedback conditions (LAF < high amplification (HAF), normal amplification (NAF), p < 0.005)

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Summary

Introduction

Force steadiness is a useful paradigm for investigating fine motor control and perceptuomotor variability [1, 2]. For static isometric contraction at very low exertion levels (2%-10% maximal voluntary contraction), the majority of previous studies reported that a high spatial resolution of the visual display (or a smaller change in force occupying a greater number of pixels) produced superior force steadiness for the young adults, supported by reduction in the size of force fluctuations [8, 9, 10]. On account of lower and more variant discharge rates, high-threshold motor units with a larger twitch force are liable to produce a greater size of force fluctuations [11, 15]

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