Bimanual Interference Increases with Force Demands and is Facilitated by Visuomotor Adaptation

Neuroscience. 2021 May 21:463:57-69. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2021.03.012. Epub 2021 Mar 15.

Abstract

When simultaneously performing asymmetrical movements with both hands, there is a tendency for the action of one limb to interfere with control of the other. Little is known about how sensory feedback influences interference. We conducted two experiments to determine how manipulating force feedback and visual feedback alter bimanual coordination during center-out reaching. In the adaptive experiment, asymmetrical reaching was induced by a visual feedback rotation for the right hand while the left hand operated under kinesthetic control (i.e., without visual feedback); in the non-adaptive experiment, asymmetrical reaching was induced by having participants move their right hand to rotated targets under veridical visual feedback, again with the left hand operating under kinesthetic control. In both experiments, we applied a spring resistive force to each hand, with different groups of participants experiencing 0 N/m, 30 N/m, or 60 N/m of resistance. In the adaptive experiment, interference increased with an increase in the force demands for movement in a dose-response fashion (i.e., the higher the resistive force, the larger the interference), but this result did not hold generally for the non-adaptive experiment. Our results indicate that adapting to a visuomotor perturbation may increase sensitivity to feedback gains, including to sensory information not present in the perturbation. Additionally, interference may reflect the application of an explicit strategy used for one limb to control the other, and the addition of an implicit adapting process may bolster this communication of motor information across motor cortices.

Keywords: bimanual reaching; feedback regulation; neural crosstalk; optimal control theory; proprioception.

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Physiological*
  • Feedback, Sensory
  • Hand
  • Humans
  • Kinesthesis
  • Movement
  • Psychomotor Performance*