Publication | Closed Access
Muscle Synergy Organization Is Robust Across a Variety of Postural Perturbations
491
Citations
52
References
2006
Year
Upright PostureMuscle FunctionMotor ControlMuscle SynergiesMovement AnalysisKinesiologyMotor SynergiesSynergy Force VectorsApplied PhysiologySynergy OrganizationKinematicsHealth SciencesPostural ResponsesMuscle Synergy OrganizationRehabilitationHuman Musculoskeletal SystemNervous SystemPostural PerturbationsPhysical TherapyNeuroanatomyPhysiologyMotor SystemElectromyographyNeuroscienceMusculoskeletal InteractionHuman MovementMedicine
Four muscle synergies can reproduce multiple muscle activation patterns in cats during postural responses to support surface translations. The study tests whether functional muscle synergies constitute a generalized control strategy for postural responses across biomechanically distinct conditions or are specific to each task. Postural responses to multidirectional translations at varying fore‑hind paw distances and to multidirectional rotations at the preferred stance distance were analyzed. Five synergies explained over 80 % of the variability in electromyographic and force tuning curves across all conditions, were consistent across six cats, and demonstrated that muscle synergy organization is a robust, general construct for balance control.
We recently showed that four muscle synergies can reproduce multiple muscle activation patterns in cats during postural responses to support surface translations. We now test the robustness of functional muscle synergies, which specify muscle groupings and the active force vectors produced during postural responses under several biomechanically distinct conditions. We aimed to determine whether such synergies represent a generalized control strategy for postural control or if they are merely specific to each postural task. Postural responses to multidirectional translations at different fore-hind paw distances and to multidirectional rotations at the preferred stance distance were analyzed. Five synergies were required to adequately reconstruct responses to translation at the preferred stance distance-four were similar to our previous analysis of translation, whereas the fifth accounted for the newly added background activity during quiet stance. These five control synergies could account for > 80% total variability or r2 > 0.6 of the electromyographic and force tuning curves for all other experimental conditions. Forces were successfully reconstructed but only when they were referenced to a coordinate system that rotated with the limb axis as stance distance changed. Finally, most of the functional muscle synergies were similar across all of the six cats in terms of muscle synergy number, synergy activation patterns, and synergy force vectors. The robustness of synergy organization across perturbation types, postures, and animals suggests that muscle synergies controlling task-variables are a general construct used by the CNS for balance control.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1