Abstract

Whether the central nervous system is capable to switch between contexts critically depends on experimental details. Motor control studies regularly adopt robotic devices to perturb the dynamics of a certain task. Other approaches investigate motor control by altering the gravitoinertial context itself as in parabolic flights and human centrifuges. In contrast to conventional robotic experiments, where only the hand is perturbed, these gravitoinertial or immersive settings coherently plunge participants into new environments. However, radically different they are, perfect adaptation of motor responses are commonly reported. In object manipulation tasks, this translates into a good matching of the grasping force or grip force to the destabilizing load force. One possible bias in these protocols is the predictability of the forthcoming dynamics. Here we test whether the successful switching and adaptation processes observed in immersive environments are a consequence of the fact that participants can predict the perturbation schedule. We used a short arm human centrifuge to decouple the effects of space and time on the dynamics of an object manipulation task by adding an unnatural explicit position-dependent force. We created different dynamical contexts by asking 20 participants to move the object at three different paces. These contextual sessions were interleaved such that we could simulate concurrent learning. We assessed adaptation by measuring how grip force was adjusted to this unnatural load force. We found that the motor system can switch between new unusual dynamical contexts, as reported by surprisingly well-adjusted grip forces, and that this capacity is not a mere consequence of the ability to predict the time course of the upcoming dynamics. We posit that a coherent flow of multimodal sensory information born in a homogeneous milieu allows switching between dynamical contexts.

Highlights

  • Consider a worker whose job is to sort Christmas packages of varying size and weight into bins, bags, or slots

  • Participants cyclically moved an instrumented object along the long body axis aligned with the gravitoinertial direction during rotation in a human centrifuge

  • We challenged the limits of the adaptation capacity of the motor system by assessing how participants controlled grip force when load force comprised a gravitoinertial component that varied explicitly with local vertical position

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Summary

Introduction

Consider a worker whose job is to sort Christmas packages of varying size and weight into bins, bags, or slots. Each of these packages will have different inertial properties and will impose different loads on the arm. The physical properties of these objects are not fixed but vary according to a given statistical distribution that depends both on object properties and on the sequence of planned movements. Despite the fact that variability occurs on a Switching between Gravitoinertial Contexts movement basis, this context is predictable in the sense that the worker can estimate the upcoming mechanical properties based on visual cues. If the worker carries out this task for a prolonged time, s/he will adjust her/his motor plan according to the object and action. Motor adaptation and context switching will occur (Kawato, 1999)

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