» Articles » PMID: 23761893

Dynamic and Opposing Adjustment of Movement Cancellation and Generation in an Oculomotor Countermanding Task

Overview
Journal J Neurosci
Specialty Neurology
Date 2013 Jun 14
PMID 23761893
Citations 8
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Adaptive adjustments of strategies help optimize behavior in a dynamic and uncertain world. Previous studies in the countermanding (or stop-signal) paradigm have detailed how reaction times (RTs) change with trial sequence, demonstrating adaptive control of movement generation. Comparatively little is known about the adaptive control of movement cancellation in the countermanding task, mainly because movement cancellation implies the absence of an outcome and estimates of movement cancellation require hundreds of trials. Here, we exploit a within-trial proxy of movement cancellation based on recordings of neck muscle activity while human subjects attempted to cancel large eye-head gaze shifts. On a subset of successfully cancelled trials where gaze remains stable, small head-only movements to the target are actively braked by a pulse of antagonist neck muscle activity. The timing of such antagonist muscle recruitment relative to the stop signal, termed the "antagonist latency," tended to decrease or increase after trials with or without a stop-signal, respectively. Over multiple time scales, fluctuations in the antagonist latency tended to be the mirror opposite of those occurring contemporaneously with RTs. These results provide new insights into the adaptive control of movement cancellation at an unprecedented resolution, suggesting it can be as prone to dynamic adjustment as movement generation. Adaptive control in the countermanding task appears to be governed by a dynamic balance between movement cancellation and generation: shifting the balance in favor of movement cancellation slows movement generation, whereas shifting the balance in favor of movement generation slows movement cancellation.

Citing Articles

Partial response electromyography as a marker of action stopping.

Raud L, Thunberg C, Huster R Elife. 2022; 11.

PMID: 35617120 PMC: 9203056. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.70332.


Temporal cascade of frontal, motor and muscle processes underlying human action-stopping.

Jana S, Hannah R, Muralidharan V, Aron A Elife. 2020; 9.

PMID: 32186515 PMC: 7159878. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.50371.


Eye Position Error Influence over "Open-Loop" Smooth Pursuit Initiation.

Buonocore A, Skinner J, Hafed Z J Neurosci. 2019; 39(14):2709-2721.

PMID: 30709895 PMC: 6445996. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2178-18.2019.


Active Braking of Whole-Arm Reaching Movements Provides Single-Trial Neuromuscular Measures of Movement Cancellation.

Atsma J, Maij F, Gu C, Medendorp W, Corneil B J Neurosci. 2018; 38(18):4367-4382.

PMID: 29636393 PMC: 6596010. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1745-17.2018.


Models of inhibitory control.

Schall J, Palmeri T, Logan G Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2017; 372(1718).

PMID: 28242727 PMC: 5332852. DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2016.0193.


References
1.
Emeric E, Brown J, Boucher L, Carpenter R, Hanes D, Harris R . Influence of history on saccade countermanding performance in humans and macaque monkeys. Vision Res. 2006; 47(1):35-49. PMC: 1815391. DOI: 10.1016/j.visres.2006.08.032. View

2.
Logan G, Van Zandt T, Verbruggen F, Wagenmakers E . On the ability to inhibit thought and action: general and special theories of an act of control. Psychol Rev. 2014; 121(1):66-95. DOI: 10.1037/a0035230. View

3.
Scangos K, Stuphorn V . Medial frontal cortex motivates but does not control movement initiation in the countermanding task. J Neurosci. 2010; 30(5):1968-82. PMC: 4041090. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4509-09.2010. View

4.
McGarry T, Inglis J, Franks I . Against a final ballistic process in the control of voluntary action: evidence using the Hoffmann reflex. Motor Control. 2000; 4(4):469-85. DOI: 10.1123/mcj.4.4.469. View

5.
Goonetilleke S, Wong J, Corneil B . Validation of a within-trial measure of the oculomotor stop process. J Neurophysiol. 2012; 108(3):760-70. DOI: 10.1152/jn.00174.2012. View