Abstract

In upright stance, light touch of a space-stationary touch reference reduces spontaneous sway. Moving the reference evokes sway responses which exhibit non-linear behavior that has been attributed to sensory reweighting. Reweighting refers to a change in the relative contribution of sensory cues signaling body sway in space and light touch cues signaling finger position with respect to the body. Here we test the hypothesis that the sensory fusion process involves a transformation of light touch signals into the same reference frame as other sensory inputs encoding body sway in space, or vice versa. Eight subjects lightly gripped a robotic manipulandum which moved in a circular arc around the ankle joint. A pseudo-randomized motion sequence with broad spectral characteristics was applied at three amplitudes. The stimulus was presented at two different heights and therefore different radial distances, which were matched in terms of angular motion. However, the higher stimulus evoked a significantly larger sway response, indicating that the response was not matched to stimulus angular motion. Instead, the body sway response was strongly related to the horizontal translation of the manipulandum. The results suggest that light touch is integrated as the horizontal distance between body COM and the finger. The data were well explained by a model with one feedback loop minimizing changes in horizontal COM-finger distance. The model further includes a second feedback loop estimating the horizontal finger motion and correcting the first loop when the touch reference is moving. The second loop includes the predicted transformation of sensory signals into the same reference frame and a non-linear threshold element that reproduces the non-linear sway responses, thus providing a mechanism that can explain reweighting.

Highlights

  • Influence of light finger touch on balanceSpontaneous sway in human upright stance is reduced when touching a space-stationary reference with a finger [1,2]

  • Stimulus angle was the same for both touch reference heights within each stimulus amplitude, the magnitude of the angular center of mass (COM) response was significantly greater when the touch reference was at the high height (F(1,7) = 11.69, p = 0.01)

  • The RMS ratio was significantly greater in the high touch reference position compared to the low position for equal stimulus amplitudes (F (1,7) = 13.25, p = 0.01)

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Summary

Introduction

Spontaneous sway in human upright stance is reduced when touching a space-stationary reference with a finger [1,2]. The amplitude of touch force in ‘light touch’ experiments is defined as a contact which is insufficient to stabilize the body mechanically, and is usually specified as less than 1 N. The sway-reducing effect can be attributed to integration of the touch. Sensory integration of a light touch reference reference as an additional source of sensory information. In addition to haptic cues (contact forces), a sensation of the finger position with respect to the body is required [2,4]. For a space-stationary touch reference, any change in finger position relative to the body is directly related to postural sway, and this can be exploited to stabilize the body

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