Thoroughman KA, Shadmehr R (1999) Electromyographic correlates of
learning an internal model of reaching movements. Journal of
Neuroscience, 19:8573-8588.
Abstract
Theoretical and
psychophysical studies have suggested that humans learn to make reaching
movements in novel dynamic environments by building specific internal models
(IMs). Here we have found electromyographic correlates of internal model
formation. We recorded EMG from four muscles as subjects learned to move a
manipulandum that created systematic forces (a ``force field''). We also
simulated a biomechanical controller which generated movements based on an
adaptive IM of the inverse dynamics of the human arm and the manipulandum. The
simulation defined two metrics of muscle activation. The first metric measured
the component of each muscle's EMG that counteracted the force field. We found
that early in
training, the field-appropriate EMG was driven by an error feedback signal. As
subjects practiced, the peak of the field-appropriate EMG shifted temporally to
earlier in the movement, becoming a feedforward command. The gradual temporal
shift suggests that the CNS may use the delayed error-feedback response, which
was likely to have been generated through spinal reflex circuits, as a template
to learn a predictive feedforward response. The second metric quantified
formation of the IM through changes in the directional bias of each muscle's
spatial EMG function, i.e., EMG as a function of movement direction. As
subjects practiced, co-activation decreased, and the directional bias of each
muscle's EMG function gradually rotated by an amount that was specific to the
field being learned. This demonstrates that formation of an IM can be
represented through rotations in the spatial tuning of muscle EMG functions.
Combined with other recent work linking spatial tunings of EMG and motor
cortical cells, these results suggest that rotations in motor cortical tuning
functions could underlie representation of internal models in the CNS.
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