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Task-related changes in sensorimotor integration influence the common synaptic input to motor neurones
ISSN
1748-1716
1748-1708
Date Issued
2014
Author(s)
DOI
10.1111/apha.12255
Abstract
AimThe purpose of this investigation was to understand how visual information, when used to guide muscle activity, influences the frequency content of the neural drive to muscles and the gain of afferent feedback. MethodsSubjects maintained static, isometric contractions of the tibialis anterior muscle by matching a visual display of their ankle dorsiflexion force to a target set at 10% of their maximum voluntary contraction level. Two visual feedback conditions were studied. The first was a high-sensitivity feedback, in which small changes in force were of large on-screen visual magnitude. The second was a low-sensitivity feedback, in which the on-screen scaling of feedback was reduced by a factor of 10, making small force fluctuations difficult to perceive. Force tremor and Hoffmann reflex (H-reflex) amplitudes were compared between the two conditions, as well as coherence among single motor unit spike trains derived from high-density EMG recordings. ResultsThe high-sensitivity feedback condition was associated with lower error, larger force tremor (4-12Hz) and larger H-reflex amplitudes relative to the low-sensitivity feedback condition. In addition, the use of high-sensitivity feedback was associated with lower 1-5Hz coherence among pairs of motor units, but larger coherence at high frequencies (6-12, approx. 20, >30Hz). ConclusionAlteration of visual feedback influences nearly the entire frequency spectrum of common input to motor neurones, as well the gain of afferent feedback. We speculate that task-related modulation of afferent feedback could be the origin of many of the observed changes in the neural drive to muscles.