Abstract

Voluntary control of force is always marked by some degree of error and unsteadiness. Both neural and mechanical factors contribute to these fluctuations, but how they interact to produce them is poorly understood. In this study, we identify and characterize a previously undescribed neuromechanical interaction where the dynamics of voluntary force production suffice to generate involuntary tremor. Specifically, participants were asked to produce isometric force with the index finger and use visual feedback to track a sinusoidal target spanning 5–9% of each individual's maximal voluntary force level. Force fluctuations and EMG activity over the flexor digitorum superficialis (FDS) muscle were recorded and their frequency content was analyzed as a function of target phase. Force variability in either the 1–5 or 6–15 Hz frequency ranges tended to be largest at the peaks and valleys of the target sinusoid. In those same periods, FDS EMG activity was synchronized with force fluctuations. We then constructed a physiologically-realistic computer simulation in which a muscle-tendon complex was set inside of a feedback-driven control loop. Surprisingly, the model sufficed to produce phase-dependent modulation of tremor similar to that observed in humans. Further, the gain of afferent feedback from muscle spindles was critical for appropriately amplifying and shaping this tremor. We suggest that the experimentally-induced tremor may represent the response of a viscoelastic muscle-tendon system to dynamic drive, and therefore does not fall into known categories of tremor generation, such as tremorogenic descending drive, stretch-reflex loop oscillations, motor unit behavior, or mechanical resonance. Our findings motivate future efforts to understand tremor from a perspective that considers neuromechanical coupling within the context of closed-loop control. The strategy of combining experimental recordings with physiologically-sound simulations will enable thorough exploration of neural and mechanical contributions to force control in health and disease.

Highlights

  • It is well known that humans cannot produce a perfectly stable force

  • We investigated the relationship between voluntary force production and involuntary force variability in a group of healthy adults engaged in a dynamic, isometric force tracking task

  • We show that involuntary tremor can arise from the dynamic viscoelastic response of afferented muscles during voluntary production of isometric force

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Summary

Introduction

Within the context of precise, goal-directed actions, involuntary force fluctuations can reveal clinically relevant information about neuromuscular control in disorders such as dystonia (Xia and Bush, 2007; Chu and Sanger, 2009), Parkinson’s disease (Vaillancourt et al, 2001; Ko et al, 2015), bruxism (Laine et al, 2015b), Force Dynamics and Tremor and essential tremor (Héroux et al, 2010), among others. In such tasks, the nature of force variability may be influenced by both central and peripheral components of sensorimotor integration. The two mechanisms likely interact, since reflex activity is itself influenced by muscle/tendon compliance (Rack et al, 1983), limb loading (Joyce and Rack, 1974), contraction history (Gregory et al, 1998), and the temporal dynamics of force production (Xia et al, 2005)

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