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Task-dependent coarticulation of movement sequences.

Hari Teja Kalidindi1,2, Frederic Crevecoeur1,2,3

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study reveals that the brain can produce both separate and coarticulated action sequences using the same control system. Instructions about intermediate goals determine whether movements are blended or distinct, highlighting feedback control

Keywords:
flexible motor controlhumanlong latency reflexmotor sequencesmotor skill learningneuroscienceoptimal feedback controlstretch reflex

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Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Motor Control
  • Computational Neuroscience

Background:

  • Classical theories suggest motor sequences are planned as a single unit, leading to coarticulation.
  • Recent neural data challenges this, proposing independent execution of individual movement elements.
  • The brain's mechanism for producing distinct vs. coarticulated action sequences remains debated.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether separate and coarticulated motor sequences arise from different neural representations or a shared control mechanism.
  • To develop and validate a computational model explaining sequence production based on task-dependent control.
  • To explore the role of feedback control in motor sequence execution.

Main Methods:

  • Computational simulations of motor sequence planning with varying intermediate goal instructions.
  • Human experiments involving a two-reach sequential movement task.
  • Electromyography to measure long-latency stretch responses to external perturbations.

Main Results:

  • Simulations demonstrated that a single task-dependent controller can generate both separate and coarticulated sequences based on goal instructions.
  • Human experiments validated the model, showing sequence type depended on intermediate goal information.
  • Coarticulated sequences showed influence from the second goal on early movement phases, indicating feedback involvement.

Conclusions:

  • Motor sequence production does not necessitate distinct neural representations for separate vs. coarticulated actions.
  • A unified computational framework explains sequence variability through task-dependent control and goal-dependent planning.
  • Feedback control plays a crucial role in the sensorimotor network during sequence execution.