Impedance control is selectively tuned to multiple directions of movement
Author(s) -
Abdelhamid Kadiallah,
Gary Liaw,
Mitsuo Kawato,
David W. Franklin,
Etienne Burdet
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of neurophysiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.302
H-Index - 245
eISSN - 1522-1598
pISSN - 0022-3077
DOI - 10.1152/jn.00079.2011
Subject(s) - movement (music) , instability , electrical impedance , stiffness , impedance control , computer science , motor control , human arm , control theory (sociology) , mechanical impedance , controller (irrigation) , control (management) , point (geometry) , neuroscience , psychology , simulation , artificial intelligence , physics , acoustics , mathematics , robot , mechanics , biology , geometry , quantum mechanics , agronomy , thermodynamics
Humans are able to learn tool-handling tasks, such as carving, demonstrating their competency to make movements in unstable environments with varied directions. When faced with a single direction of instability, humans learn to selectively co-contract their arm muscles tuning the mechanical stiffness of the limb end point to stabilize movements. This study examines, for the first time, subjects simultaneously adapting to two distinct directions of instability, a situation that may typically occur when using tools. Subjects learned to perform reaching movements in two directions, each of which had lateral instability requiring control of impedance. The subjects were able to adapt to these unstable interactions and switch between movements in the two directions; they did so by learning to selectively control the end-point stiffness counteracting the environmental instability without superfluous stiffness in other directions. This finding demonstrates that the central nervous system can simultaneously tune the mechanical impedance of the limbs to multiple movements by learning movement-specific solutions. Furthermore, it suggests that the impedance controller learns as a function of the state of the arm rather than a general strategy.
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