Abstract

In targeted movements of the hand, descending activation patterns must not only generate muscle activation but also adjust spinal reflexes from stabilizing the initial to stabilizing the final postural state. We estimate descending activation patterns that change minimally while generating a targeted movement within a given movement time based on a model of the biomechanics, the muscle dynamics, and the stretch reflex. The estimated descending activation patterns predict human movement trajectories quite well. Their temporal structure varies across workspace and with movement speed, from monotonic profiles for slow movements to nonmonotonic profiles for fast movements. Descending activation patterns at different speeds thus do not result from a mere rescaling of invariant templates but reflect varying needs to compensate for interaction torques and muscle dynamics. The virtual attractor trajectories, on which active muscle torques are zero, lie within reachable workspace and are largely invariant when represented in end-effector coordinates. Their temporal structure along movement direction changes from linear ramps to "N-shaped" profiles with increasing movement speed.NEW & NOTEWORTHY The descending activation patterns driving movement must be integrated with spinal reflexes, which would resist movement if left unchanged. We estimate the descending activation patterns at different movement speeds using a model of the stretch reflex and of muscle and limb dynamics. The descending activation patterns we find are temporally structured to compensate for interaction torques as predicted by internal models but also shift the reflex threshold, solving the posture-movement problem.

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