Moving an arm or leg in a rhythmic motion—cranking a handle, for instance, or pedaling a bicycle—is a feat of biological orchestration, as illustrated here in scientific data from a new study of movements made by animals.
Muscle
force (top line) is generated by the electrical ‘spikes’ of multiple individual
motoneurons. Experimenters determined when motoneurons spiked (dots at top)
from the electrical activity of muscle fibers (middle) based on the
spike-waveforms specific to each motoneuron (bottom). (Najja Marshall /
Churchland lab / Columbia’s Zuckerman Institute)
The smooth line at the top tracks the
changing forces exerted by muscles pushing on a handle. Electromyography
measurements in the middle reveal the contractions of thousands of individual
fibers within one of those muscles. At the bottom are magnified views of
electrical impulses generated by nerve cells called motor neurons, each of
which can stimulate around a hundred muscle fibers.
A foundational belief in the field is
that the brain doesn’t need to command each one of the roughly 50,000 motor
neurons that cause our muscle to contract. In this view, a given muscle is, for
the most part, controlled holistically, with the few hundred motor neurons
stimulating it receiving the same force-commanding drive from the brain.
The data here upend that simple
perspective. First author Najja Marshall, who recently completed his PhD, found
that animals quickly shifted which motor neurons they use when engaged in
different movements. This selection of motor neurons could be influenced by
stimulating the brain, suggesting that the brain has finer-grained control than
previously thought possible.
This could provide a greater flexibility for optimizing movements. For example, the ability of a Tour de France competitor to complete a stage depends on both fast-twitch fibers that contract quickly but tire easily, and slow-twitch fibers that contract slowly but have greater endurance. The brain’s micromanaging of motor neuron activity likely allows it to fine-tune the balance of fast- and slow-twitch fibers used when pedaling at different speeds. Doing so could not only increase efficiency but allow the brain to more accurately generate the exact force profile it desires.
Source: https://zuckermaninstitute.columbia.edu/mental-landscapes-fine-tuning-movement
Journal article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41593-022-01165-8
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