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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 2 February 2001, pp. 784-789
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Ashton Graybiel Spatial Orientation Laboratory and Volen Center for Complex Systems, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts 02454
DiZio, Paul and
James R. Lackner.
Coriolis-Force-Induced Trajectory and Endpoint Deviations in the
Reaching Movements of Labyrinthine-Defective Subjects. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 784-789, 2001. When
reaching movements are made during passive constant velocity body
rotation, inertial Coriolis accelerations are generated that displace
both movement paths and endpoints in their direction. These findings
directly contradict equilibrium point theories of movement control.
However, it has been argued that these movement errors relate to
subjects sensing their body rotation through continuing vestibular
activity and making corrective movements. In the present study, we
evaluated the reaching movements of five labyrinthine-defective
subjects (lacking both semicircular canal and otolith function) who
cannot sense passive body rotation in the dark and five age-matched,
normal control subjects. Each pointed 40 times in complete darkness to
the location of a just extinguished visual target before, during, and
after constant velocity rotation at 10 rpm in the center of a fully
enclosed slow rotation room. All subjects, including the normal
controls, always felt completely stationary when making their
movements. During rotation, both groups initially showed large
deviations of their movement paths and endpoints in the direction of
the transient Coriolis forces generated by their movements. With
additional per-rotation movements, both groups showed complete
adaptation of movement curvature (restoration of straight-line reaches)
during rotation. The labyrinthine-defective subjects, however, failed
to regain fully accurate movement endpoints after 40 reaches, unlike
the control subjects who did so within 11 reaches. Postrotation, both
groups' movements initially had mirror image curvatures to their
initial per-rotation reaches; the endpoint aftereffects were
significantly different from prerotation baseline for the control
subjects but not for the labyrinthine-defective subjects reflecting the
smaller amount of endpoint adaptation they achieved during rotation.
The labyrinthine-defective subjects' movements had significantly lower
peak velocity, higher peak elevation, lower terminal velocity, and a
more vertical touchdown than those of the control subjects. Thus the
way their reaches terminated denied them the somatosensory contact cues
necessary for full endpoint adaptation. These findings fully contradict
equilibrium point theories of movement control. They emphasize the
importance of contact cues in adaptive movement control and indicate
that movement errors generated by Coriolis perturbations of limb
movements reveal characteristics of motor planning and adaptation in
both healthy and clinical populations.
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