Role and modulation of various spinal pathways for human upper limb control in different gravity conditions.

Humans can perform movements in various physical environments and positions (corresponding to different experienced gravity), requiring the interaction of the musculoskeletal system, the neural system and the external environment. The neural system is itself comprised of several interactive componen...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alice Bruel, Lina Bacha, Emma Boehly, Constance De Trogoff, Luca Represa, Gregoire Courtine, Auke Ijspeert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012069
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832540300086607872
author Alice Bruel
Lina Bacha
Emma Boehly
Constance De Trogoff
Luca Represa
Gregoire Courtine
Auke Ijspeert
author_facet Alice Bruel
Lina Bacha
Emma Boehly
Constance De Trogoff
Luca Represa
Gregoire Courtine
Auke Ijspeert
author_sort Alice Bruel
collection DOAJ
description Humans can perform movements in various physical environments and positions (corresponding to different experienced gravity), requiring the interaction of the musculoskeletal system, the neural system and the external environment. The neural system is itself comprised of several interactive components, from the brain mainly conducting motor planning, to the spinal cord (SC) implementing its own motor control centres through sensory reflexes. Nevertheless, it remains unclear whether similar movements in various environmental dynamics necessitate adapting modulation at the brain level, correcting modulation at the spinal level, or both. Here, we addressed this question by focusing on upper limb motor control in various gravity conditions (magnitudes and directions) and using neuromusculoskeletal simulation tools. We integrated supraspinal sinusoidal commands with a modular SC model controlling a musculoskeletal model to reproduce various recorded arm trajectories (kinematics and EMGs) in different contexts. We first studied the role of various spinal pathways (such as stretch reflexes) in movement smoothness and robustness against perturbation. Then, we optimised the supraspinal sinusoidal commands without and with a fixed SC model including stretch reflexes to reproduce a target trajectory in various gravity conditions. Inversely, we fixed the supraspinal commands and optimised the spinal synaptic strengths in the different environments. In the first optimisation context, the presence of SC resulted in easier optimisation of the supraspinal commands (faster convergence, better performance). The main supraspinal commands modulation was found in the flexor sinusoid's amplitude, resp. frequency, to adapt to different gravity magnitudes, resp. directions. In the second optimisation context, the modulation of the spinal synaptic strengths also remarkably reproduced the target trajectory for the mild gravity changes. We highlighted that both strategies of modulation of the supraspinal commands or spinal stretch pathways can be used to control movements in different gravity environments. Our results thus support that the SC can assist gravity compensation.
format Article
id doaj-art-167a2776efe646dabd526291ce616c63
institution Kabale University
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS Computational Biology
spelling doaj-art-167a2776efe646dabd526291ce616c632025-02-05T05:30:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582025-01-01211e101206910.1371/journal.pcbi.1012069Role and modulation of various spinal pathways for human upper limb control in different gravity conditions.Alice BruelLina BachaEmma BoehlyConstance De TrogoffLuca RepresaGregoire CourtineAuke IjspeertHumans can perform movements in various physical environments and positions (corresponding to different experienced gravity), requiring the interaction of the musculoskeletal system, the neural system and the external environment. The neural system is itself comprised of several interactive components, from the brain mainly conducting motor planning, to the spinal cord (SC) implementing its own motor control centres through sensory reflexes. Nevertheless, it remains unclear whether similar movements in various environmental dynamics necessitate adapting modulation at the brain level, correcting modulation at the spinal level, or both. Here, we addressed this question by focusing on upper limb motor control in various gravity conditions (magnitudes and directions) and using neuromusculoskeletal simulation tools. We integrated supraspinal sinusoidal commands with a modular SC model controlling a musculoskeletal model to reproduce various recorded arm trajectories (kinematics and EMGs) in different contexts. We first studied the role of various spinal pathways (such as stretch reflexes) in movement smoothness and robustness against perturbation. Then, we optimised the supraspinal sinusoidal commands without and with a fixed SC model including stretch reflexes to reproduce a target trajectory in various gravity conditions. Inversely, we fixed the supraspinal commands and optimised the spinal synaptic strengths in the different environments. In the first optimisation context, the presence of SC resulted in easier optimisation of the supraspinal commands (faster convergence, better performance). The main supraspinal commands modulation was found in the flexor sinusoid's amplitude, resp. frequency, to adapt to different gravity magnitudes, resp. directions. In the second optimisation context, the modulation of the spinal synaptic strengths also remarkably reproduced the target trajectory for the mild gravity changes. We highlighted that both strategies of modulation of the supraspinal commands or spinal stretch pathways can be used to control movements in different gravity environments. Our results thus support that the SC can assist gravity compensation.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012069
spellingShingle Alice Bruel
Lina Bacha
Emma Boehly
Constance De Trogoff
Luca Represa
Gregoire Courtine
Auke Ijspeert
Role and modulation of various spinal pathways for human upper limb control in different gravity conditions.
PLoS Computational Biology
title Role and modulation of various spinal pathways for human upper limb control in different gravity conditions.
title_full Role and modulation of various spinal pathways for human upper limb control in different gravity conditions.
title_fullStr Role and modulation of various spinal pathways for human upper limb control in different gravity conditions.
title_full_unstemmed Role and modulation of various spinal pathways for human upper limb control in different gravity conditions.
title_short Role and modulation of various spinal pathways for human upper limb control in different gravity conditions.
title_sort role and modulation of various spinal pathways for human upper limb control in different gravity conditions
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012069
work_keys_str_mv AT alicebruel roleandmodulationofvariousspinalpathwaysforhumanupperlimbcontrolindifferentgravityconditions
AT linabacha roleandmodulationofvariousspinalpathwaysforhumanupperlimbcontrolindifferentgravityconditions
AT emmaboehly roleandmodulationofvariousspinalpathwaysforhumanupperlimbcontrolindifferentgravityconditions
AT constancedetrogoff roleandmodulationofvariousspinalpathwaysforhumanupperlimbcontrolindifferentgravityconditions
AT lucarepresa roleandmodulationofvariousspinalpathwaysforhumanupperlimbcontrolindifferentgravityconditions
AT gregoirecourtine roleandmodulationofvariousspinalpathwaysforhumanupperlimbcontrolindifferentgravityconditions
AT aukeijspeert roleandmodulationofvariousspinalpathwaysforhumanupperlimbcontrolindifferentgravityconditions