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Volume 17, Number 6, Issue of March 15, 1997 pp. 2128-2142
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience

Postural Dependence of Muscle Actions: Implications for Neural Control

Received Aug. 20, 1996; revised Dec. 9, 1996; accepted Dec. 16, 1996.

Christopher A. Buneo, John F. Soechting, and Martha Flanders

Department of Physiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455

The neural control of reaching entails the specification of a precise pattern of muscle activation distributed across the many muscles of the arm. Musculoskeletal geometry limits the possible solutions to this problem. Insight into the nature of this constraint was obtained by quantifying the postural variation in the mechanical actions of six human shoulder muscles. Estimates of muscle mechanical actions were obtained by electrically stimulating muscles to the point of contraction and recording the resulting forces and torques with a six-degree-of-freedom force-torque transducer. In a given experiment, data were obtained for up to 29 different arm postures. The mechanical actions of each muscle varied systematically with arm posture, regardless of the frame of reference used to define these actions. The nature of this dependence suggests that a relatively simple strategy can be used by the nervous system to account for the changing mechanical actions of arm muscles.

Key words: muscle; torque; internal model; arm movement; reaching; posture




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