Data from: Extrinsic and intrinsic dynamics in movement intermittency
What determines how we move in the world? Motor neuroscience often focusses either on intrinsic rhythmical properties of motor circuits or extrinsic sensorimotor feedback loops. Here we show that the interplay of both intrinsic and extrinsic dynamics is required to explain the intermittency observed...
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Zusammenfassung: | What determines how we move in the world? Motor neuroscience often
focusses either on intrinsic rhythmical properties of motor circuits or
extrinsic sensorimotor feedback loops. Here we show that the interplay of
both intrinsic and extrinsic dynamics is required to explain the
intermittency observed in continuous tracking movements. Using
spatiotemporal perturbations in humans, we demonstrate that apparently
discrete submovements made 2-3 times per second reflect constructive
interference between motor errors and continuous feedback corrections that
are filtered by intrinsic circuitry in the motor system. Local field
potentials in monkey motor cortex revealed characteristic signatures of a
Kalman filter, giving rise to both low-frequency cortical cycles during
movement, and delta oscillations during sleep. We interpret these results
within the framework of optimal feedback control, and suggest that the
intrinsic rhythmicity of motor cortical networks reflects an internal
model of external dynamics, which is used for state estimation during
feedback-guided movement. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.53sq7kn |