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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 5 November 2000, pp. 2670-2679
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Northwestern University, Evanston 60208; and Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60611
Popescu, Florin C. and
W. Zev Rymer.
End Points of Planar Reaching Movements Are Disrupted by Small
Force Pulses: An Evaluation of the Hypothesis of Equifinality. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 2670-2679, 2000. A
single force pulse was applied unexpectedly to the arms of five normal
human subjects during nonvisually guided planar reaching movements of
10-cm amplitude. The pulse was applied by a powered manipulandum in a
direction perpendicular to the motion of the hand, which gripped the
manipulandum via a handle at the beginning, at the middle, or toward
the end the movement. It was small and brief (10 N, 10 ms), so that it
was barely perceptible. We found that the end points of the perturbed
motions were systematically different from those of the unperturbed
movements. This difference, dubbed "terminal error," averaged
14.4 ± 9.8% (mean ± SD) of the movement distance.
The terminal error was not necessarily in the direction of the
perturbation, although it was affected by it, and it did not decrease
significantly with practice. For example, while perturbations involving
elbow extension resulted in a statistically significant shift in mean
end-point and target-acquisition frequency, the flexion perturbations
were not clearly affected. We argue that this error distribution is
inconsistent with the "equilibrium point hypothesis" (EPH), which
predicts minimal terminal error is determined primarily by the variance
in the command signal itself, a property referred to as
"equifinality." This property reputedly derives from the
"spring-like" properties of muscle and is enhanced by reflexes. To
ensure that terminal errors were not due to mid-course voluntary
corrections, we only accepted trials in which the final position was
already established before such a voluntary response to the
perturbation could have begun, that is, in a time interval shorter than
the minimum reaction time (RT) for that subject. This RT was estimated
for each subject in supplementary experiments in which the subject was
instructed to move to a new target if perturbed and to the old target
if no perturbation was detected. These RT movements were found to either stop or slow greatly at the original target, then re-accelerate to the new one. The average latency of this second motion was used to
estimate the voluntary RT for each subject (316 ms mean). Additionally,
we found that the hand neither exerted target-oriented force against
the handle nor drifted toward the desired end point just before coming
to rest, making it unlikely that the mechanical properties of the
manipulandum prevented the hand from reaching its intended target.
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