The Stop Signal Task (SST) has been the benchmark for studying the behavioral and physiological basis of movement generation and inhibition. In our study, we extended the scope beyond physiological findings related to muscle activity, focusing our analysis on the initial biomechanical state of the effector. By incorporating a force sensitive resistor (FSR), we continuously monitored the force applied by the effector (here, the index finger) during a button release version of the SST. This modified task design allowed us to examine both the baseline force before the relevant Go signal was presented and during the covert state of movement preparation. Notably, variations in force over time in response to the Go signal revealed differences across trials where movement was either generated or successfully inhibited, depending on the amount of force during the baseline period. Specifically, higher baseline force was associated with a delayed movement generation, which, simultaneously slowed down the force release, facilitating successful inhibition when requested. Our results highlight the influence of biomechanical variables in movement control, which should be accounted for by the models developed for investigating the physiology of this ability.

Force monitoring reveals single trial dynamics of motor control in a stop signal task / Ramawat, Surabhi; Marc, Isabel B.; Di Bello, Fabio; Bardella, Giampiero; Ferraina, Stefano; Pani, Pierpaolo; Brunamonti, Emiliano. - In: PHYSIOLOGICAL REPORTS. - ISSN 2051-817X. - 12:22(2024). [10.14814/phy2.70127]

Force monitoring reveals single trial dynamics of motor control in a stop signal task

Ramawat, Surabhi
Primo
;
Marc, Isabel B.
Secondo
;
Di Bello, Fabio;Bardella, Giampiero;Ferraina, Stefano;Pani, Pierpaolo
Penultimo
;
Brunamonti, Emiliano
Ultimo
2024

Abstract

The Stop Signal Task (SST) has been the benchmark for studying the behavioral and physiological basis of movement generation and inhibition. In our study, we extended the scope beyond physiological findings related to muscle activity, focusing our analysis on the initial biomechanical state of the effector. By incorporating a force sensitive resistor (FSR), we continuously monitored the force applied by the effector (here, the index finger) during a button release version of the SST. This modified task design allowed us to examine both the baseline force before the relevant Go signal was presented and during the covert state of movement preparation. Notably, variations in force over time in response to the Go signal revealed differences across trials where movement was either generated or successfully inhibited, depending on the amount of force during the baseline period. Specifically, higher baseline force was associated with a delayed movement generation, which, simultaneously slowed down the force release, facilitating successful inhibition when requested. Our results highlight the influence of biomechanical variables in movement control, which should be accounted for by the models developed for investigating the physiology of this ability.
2024
baseline force, effector's biomechanics, stop signal reaction time, stop signal task
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Force monitoring reveals single trial dynamics of motor control in a stop signal task / Ramawat, Surabhi; Marc, Isabel B.; Di Bello, Fabio; Bardella, Giampiero; Ferraina, Stefano; Pani, Pierpaolo; Brunamonti, Emiliano. - In: PHYSIOLOGICAL REPORTS. - ISSN 2051-817X. - 12:22(2024). [10.14814/phy2.70127]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1727438
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