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J Neurophysiol (April 1, 2003). 10.1152/jn.00852.2002
Submitted on Submitted 25 September 2002; accepted in final form 6 December 2002
School of Human Kinetics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z1, Canada
Carlsen, Anthony N.,
Michael A. Hunt,
J. Timothy Inglis,
David
J. Sanderson, and
Romeo Chua.
Altered Triggering of a Prepared Movement by a Startling Stimulus. J. Neurophysiol. 89: 1857-1863, 2003. An experiment is reported that investigated the
effects of an auditory startling stimulus on a compound movement task.
Previous findings have shown that, in a targeting task, a secondary
movement can be initiated based on the proprioceptive information
provided by a primary movement. Studies involving the
presentation of a startling stimulus have shown that in reaction time
(RT) tasks, prepared ballistic movements could be released early when
participants are startled. In the present study we sought to determine
whether the secondary component in an ongoing movement task, once
prepared, could also be triggered by a startling stimulus. Participants performed a slow active elbow extension (22°/s), opening their hand
when the arm passed 55° of extension from the starting point. An
unexpected 124 dB startle stimulus was presented 5, 25, or 45° into
the movement. Findings showed that, when participants were startled,
the secondary component was triggered despite incongruent kinesthetic
information. However, this only occurred when the startle was presented
late in the primary movement. This suggests that the secondary movement
was not prepared prior to task initiation, but was "loaded" into
lower brain structures at some point during the movement in preparation
to be triggered by the CNS. This occurred late in the movement
sequence, but
400 ms prior to reaching the target. These findings
indicate that, in addition to ballistic RT tasks, a startle can be used
to probe response preparation in ongoing compound movement tasks.
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