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Competition between movement plans increases motor variability: evidence of a shared resource for movement planning

Authors :
Oostwoud Wijdenes, Leonie
Ivry, Richard B
Bays, Paul M
Oostwoud Wijdenes, Leonie [0000-0002-7264-7853]
Bays, Paul M [0000-0003-4684-4893]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Journal of Neurophysiology
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
American Physiological Society, 2016.

Abstract

Various lines of evidence indicate that multiple movements can be prepared in parallel. Here, we show that preparing more than one movement comes with a cost: a movement plan is more variable if it is prepared simultaneously with another plan. This suggests that the representations of movement plans share a common neural resource and implies that the number of alternative plans is constrained by noise.<br />Do movement plans, like representations in working memory, share a limited pool of resources? If so, the precision with which each individual movement plan is specified should decrease as the total number of movement plans increases. To explore this, human participants made speeded reaching movements toward visual targets. We examined if preparing one movement resulted in less variability than preparing two movements. The number of planned movements was manipulated in a delayed response cueing procedure that limited planning to a single target (experiment 1) or hand (experiment 2) or required planning of movements toward two targets (or with two hands). For both experiments, initial movement direction variability was higher in the two-plan condition than in the one-plan condition, demonstrating a cost associated with planning multiple movements, consistent with the limited resource hypothesis. In experiment 3, we showed that the advantage in initial variability of preparing a single movement was present only when the trajectory could be fully specified. This indicates that the difference in variability between one and two plans reflects the specification of full motor plans, not a general preparedness to move. The precision cost related to concurrent plans represents a novel constraint on motor preparation, indicating that multiple movements cannot be planned independently, even if they involve different limbs.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15221598 and 00223077
Volume :
116
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurophysiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cf76645e8cd913c785585dac06cff0c6