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2019 • Journal Article

Robust control in human reaching movements: a model-free strategy to compensate for unpredictable disturbances

Authors:
Crevecoeur, Frédéric , Scott, S. H., Cluff, Tyler
Published in:
The Journal of Neuroscience

Pages: 0770-19

Current models of motor learning suggest that multiple timescales support adaptation to changes in visual or mechanical properties of the environment. These models capture patterns of learning and memory across a broad range of tasks, yet do not consider the possibility that rapid changes in behaviour may occur without adaptation. Such changes in behaviour may be desirable when facing transient disturbances, or when unpredictable changes in visual or mechanical properties of the task make it difficult to form an accurate model of the perturbation. Whether humans can modulate control strategies without an accurate model of the perturbation remains unknown. Here we frame this question in the context of robust control ([graphic1]-control), a control strategy that specifically considers unpredictable disturbances by increasing initial movement speed and feedback gains. Correspondingly, we demonstrate in two human reaching experiments including males and females that the occurrence of a single unpredictable disturbance led to an increase in movement speed and in the gain of rapid feedback responses to mechanical disturbances on subsequent movements. This strategy reduced perturbation-related motion irrespective of the direction of the perturbation. Furthermore, we found that changes in the control strategy were associated with co-contraction, which amplified the gain of muscle responses to both lengthening and shortening perturbations. These results have important implications for studies on motor adaptation as they highlight that trial-by-trial changes in limb motion also reflected changes in control strategies dissociable from error-based adaptation.

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