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First published online May 18, 2006
Journal of Experimental Biology 209, 2199-2214 (2006)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2006
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02251
Perturbation of leg protraction causes context-dependent modulation of inter-leg coordination, but not of avoidance reflexes

Abteilung für Biologische Kybernetik und Theoretische Biologie, Fakultät für Biologie, Universität Bielefeld, Postfach 10 01 31, 33501 Bielefeld, Germany
Author for correspondence (e-mail:
volker.duerr{at}uni-bielefeld.de)
Accepted 3 April 2006
| Summary |
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In all three walking contexts, obstacle contact caused an avoidance movement of the front leg that deviated from the unperturbed swing trajectory. Swing duration was increased while step distance was decreased; however, both effects vanished in the subsequent unperturbed step. The prevailing immediate reaction of the three leg joints were retraction of the coxa (>76%), levation of the femur (>80%), and flexion of the tibia (>80%), regardless of the behavioural context and, therefore, joint action prior to perturbation. Moreover, activation of each one of these joint actions was shown to be independent of the other two. Thus, local avoidance reflexes are not modulated by the descending visual information that causes transition from straight to curve walking, but are composed of context-independent joint actions.
Perturbation of the front leg also caused significant shifts of the touch-down position of the perturbed leg and of its unperturbed neighbours. If the inner front leg was perturbed, this shift could persist until the subsequent step. Perturbation affected both the spatial location and the timing of touch-down and lift-off transitions in unperturbed neighbouring legs. These effects on inter-leg coordination were context-dependent. For example, time delay to lift-off of the contralateral neighbour was shortened in inner and straight walking legs, but not in outer legs. Finally, a targeting mechanism that determines foot placement in stick insects was shown to be affected by perturbation in a context-dependent manner.
We conclude that the immediate compensatory response of the perturbed leg is not adapted to the behavioural context in spite of strongly differing step kinematics, whereas the compensatory effect on inter-limb coupling is context-dependent.
Key words: stick insect, Carausius morosus, curve walking, avoidance reflex, leg coordination, context-dependency
| Introduction |
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The objective of the present study was to reveal the extent to which fast
compensatory responses to mechanical perturbations are context-sensitive in
walking stick insects (Carausius morosus), a model system of
multi-legged locomotion. In particular, we studied the context sensitivity of
fast avoidance reflexes and of associated changes in inter-leg coordination in
response to mechanical perturbation of front leg protraction. Straight walking
stick insects were known to respond to such perturbation with an avoidance
reflex that is characterised by prolonged swing duration, followed by
irregular steps of the perturbed leg
(Cruse and Epstein, 1982
;
Dean and Wendler, 1982
). The
latter studies further showed that perturbation also affected inter-leg
coordination, for example, by a rearward shift of the lift-off position of the
anterior neighbour leg. Here, we compared the course of such compensatory
responses in three walking situations that strongly differ in limb kinematics
(Dürr and Ebeling, 2005
)
and coupling strength between adjacent legs
(Dürr, 2005
). Moreover,
we studied the effect of the perturbation on a spatial coupling mechanism that
causes a protracting leg to touch down near the footprint of the anterior leg
(Cruse, 1979
).
Our analysis focused on the control of front leg movements and on coupling
between the perturbed front leg and its unperturbed neighbouring legs.
Generally, insect front legs are frequently used in different behavioural
contexts, e.g. grooming in crickets
(Honegger et al., 1979
),
catching prey in praying mantids, or digging in cicada larvae. In walking
cockroaches, front legs have more degrees of freedom than the other legs
(Watson et al., 2002
) and are
influenced more strongly by descending signals than are posterior legs
(Schaefer and Ritzmann, 2001
).
In stick insects, antennal tactile cues can trigger fast re-targeting of an
ongoing front leg swing movement
(Dürr and Krause, 2001
),
lack of appropriate ground contact information can induce the smooth
transition from a swing movement into cyclic searching movements, e.g. in
C. morosus (Dürr,
2001
) and Aretaon asperrimus
(Bläsing and Cruse, 2004
),
and visual motion cues can trigger the kinematic transition from straight to
curve walking (Dürr and Ebeling,
2005
). In the latter case, front leg motor networks can be
considered a primary target of descending visual interneurones because of the
magnitude and speed of the front leg response.
A common observation that was crucial to the design of our experiments is
that the kinematics of front leg movements often undergo dramatic changes as
the animal enters a new behavioural context. Here, we experimentally brought
about such kinematic changes by causing the animal to enter a steady curve
walk by means of a large-field visual motion stimulus. Thus, by altering the
behavioural context from straight walking into a left or right turn, we forced
the animal to change its front leg kinematics
(Dürr and Ebeling, 2005
)
such that the activation pattern of the three leg joints differed
considerably. This then allowed us to test whether perturbation caused a
consistent, i.e. context-insensitive, activation pattern of all leg joints
during all compensatory responses, or whether compensatory responses differed
between contexts. Since we always disturbed right front legs, the prevalent
activation pattern of the perturbed leg corresponded to three distinct
contexts: straight walking leg perturbed, inner curve walking leg perturbed,
and outer curve walking leg perturbed.
Concerning the avoidance reflex, the following alternative hypotheses were
tested. (1) Different avoidance reflex movements would indicate that the
nature of the reflex depended on the current activation pattern of the
contributing muscle groups. (2) Identical avoidance reflex movements would
indicate recruitment of the same set of muscles irrespective of the current
movement context of the leg. In the first case, the avoidance reflex could be
the result of the muscle activation pattern having switched to the
antagonistic pattern, i.e. by each joint reversing its action.
Context-dependent reflex activity has been described in a number of arthropod
species. It can be a result of selective activation of distinct motor patterns
depending on which set of mechanoreceptors are stimulated
(Siegler and Burrows, 1986
),
or due to gain modulation (Belanger et al.,
2000
), sign reversal
(Bässler and Büschges,
1998
), gating (Staudacher and
Schildberger, 1998
) or likelihood modulation
(Gras and Bartels, 1998
),
depending on the current behavioural state.
Concerning compensatory modulation of inter-joint coupling, we tested
whether or not perturbation caused significant differences in spatial footfall
patterns, temporal delays between stance-swing transitions between adjacent
legs, and in spatial coordination according to the targeting mechanism
described by Cruse (Cruse,
1979
). Following the notion that each coupling mechanism is
characterised by information flow from a sender leg to a receiver leg
(Dürr, 2005
), we expected
that perturbation of the sender leg would affect the step cycle of the
receiver leg.
Our results show that obstacle contact leads to an avoidance movement that, in spite of drastically different kinematics at the time of perturbation, remains the same in all three walking contexts. Moreover, we present evidence that each one of the three leg joints is affected independently of the others. In contrast, we found that compensatory leg coordination differed in a context-dependent manner.
| Materials and methods |
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A detailed description of the experimental design has been given in a
previous study (Dürr and Ebeling,
2005
) and will be briefly reiterated here. Stick insects walked on
a light Styrofoam ball (diameter 19.7 cm, mass 11.6 g, moment of inertia
7.5x10-2 g m2) over which they were tethered in a
fixed position. The support was counterbalanced in order to make the animals
carry their own weight only. Tethering did not constrain head or leg
movements. The optomotor turning response to a large-field visual motion
stimulus was exploited to elicit steady curve walking behaviour. This motion
stimulus was a rotating paper cylinder (height 32 cm, diameter 27.4 cm) with a
vertical black-and-white stripe pattern (
=24°, temporal
frequency=1.6 Hz, mean luminance
60 cd m-2, brightness
contrast
90%, angular velocity=38.1 deg s-1). Visual motion
caused a turning response in the same direction. Since we only perturbed right
front legs, curve-walking trials with clockwise turning direction meant that
the front leg on the inner side of the curve was perturbed, whereas trials
with counter-clockwise turning direction meant that the front leg on the outer
side of the curve was perturbed. Therefore, clockwise trials are termed `inner
leg' trials, whereas counter clockwise trials are termed `outer leg' trials
throughout this study. A lack of stimulus motion led to straight walking,
which was considered the reference behavioural context. Trial duration was 21
s. There was no rotation of the stripe cylinder during the first 7 s, then the
stimulus began and continued for the following 14 s. Direction of rotation was
randomised. Between trials, the insects were left in the set-up for at least 1
min with neither illumination nor rotation of the stripe cylinder. From time
to time, drops of water were offered by means of a paintbrush. We selected
trials that showed consistent walking behaviour before and after obstacle
contact and an obvious turning reaction after stimulus onset. Out of seven
stick insects used, five individuals contributed to each sample per walking
context with at least four trials. Each experimental context had different
sample sizes: inner leg, 51; straight walking, 64; and outer leg, 58.
As animals walked, they rotated the ball underneath them; its movement was recorded optically. The data collected by the optical tracking system were saved on a PC that also controlled the set-up by means of an AD/DA converter. Walking behaviour was monitored and recorded from above using a video camera (1.4 m above the set-up; Fricke GmbH, CCD-7250, Lübbecke, Germany) with a frame rate of 50 Hz and an optical resolution of 0.395 mm per pixel. Video sequences were stored on tape (Panasonic NV-F70) and captured as AVI files for further processing on a PC (MiroVideo 30plus, Pinnacle Systems GmbH, Braunschweig, Germany). AVI files were analysed frame-by-frame using software that was custom-written by Jure Zakotnik (Dept. Biological Cybernetics, University of Bielefeld, Germany). The video system and PC were synchronised by TTL-trigger pulses of the video camera. A frame code generator (Magnasonic VTG 200, Spitzer-Mileger, Basel, Switzerland) was used to match single video frames to the data of the tracking system.
Perturbation of swing movements
Only one swing movement of the right front leg was perturbed per trial. The
obstacle that we used to perturb front leg movements was constructed from
metal wire (diameter 2 mm) that was bent so that it could be handled from
outside the striped cylinder. It was painted grey to approximately match mean
luminance of the visual stimulus and, therefore, minimise visual contrast. Its
angular size with regard to its distance from the animal's eye was approx.
1.14°, which is well below the inter-ommatidial angle of the compound eye.
Owing to its size and contrast, but also to lack of any observed orientation
response toward or away from the obstacle, we assume it was invisible to the
stick insect. Shortly before perturbation, the obstacle was moved from the
right side and behind the animal and inserted into the workspace of the leg.
Only swing movements were obstructed (Fig.
1A). In many cases, even quick withdrawal of the probe after the
initial contact could not avoid multiple contacts between the obstacle and the
front leg. In the selected trials shown in
Fig. 2A, there is one short
obstacle contact each. In other trials, obstacle contact could take place up
to a maximum of four times before either the leg successfully moved around the
obstacle or the obstacle was withdrawn. Single obstacle contacts of longer
duration than in the examples shown in Fig.
2 were also common. The range of obstacle contact duration was
20-280 ms with a median of 60 ms. The avoidance reaction was an obligatory
criterion, i.e. we did not select trials in which the leg touched down in
response to obstacle contact or grasped hold of the obstacle.
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Since our analysis of reflex behaviour was based on the video frames immediately before and after the first instance of obstacle contact, variability of contact number and duration did not affect the presented results. Contact between the obstacle and the leg occurred either at the front leg tibia (93%) or tarsus (7%). There was no systematic effect of contact location (proximal tibia, distal tibia or tarsus) in any of the three walking contexts. For the analysis of the movement components before and after perturbation, we chose a time window of 20 ms, i.e. the distance covered between two video frames. This time window was long enough to resolve the displacement caused by the movement, but was short enough to detect the immediate reaction to perturbation.
Each perturbation response was analysed as a sequence of three subsequent
swing movements: unperturbed reference, perturbed and unperturbed control.
Ideally, perturbation responses were elicited twice per trial: first during
the straight walking period (first 7 s) and later during one of the two
curve-walking situations (after at least 14 s). In curve walking trials,
perturbation responses were analysed only after at least four step cycles had
been completed following the onset of cylinder rotation to ensure the
transition was long enough to monitor steady curve walking behaviour
(Dürr and Ebeling, 2005
).
Swing trajectories were analysed from video sequences following frame-by-frame
digitisation of five points on the body. A point between the hind leg coxae
and another between the front leg coxae together defined the body long axis of
the animal and the body-fixed coordinate system. Three points near the
coxa-trochanter joint (CTr), femur-tibia joint (FTi) and tibia-tarsus joint
(TiTa), respectively, defined the leg plane and joint angles. A custom-written
computer programme calculated all coordinates in a body-fixed Cartesian
coordinate system with the long axis being the x-axis and the origin between
the front leg coxae. Segment lengths were used to estimate the height of the
FTi and TiTa joints above the walking surface and thus to calculate the CTr
and FTi joint angles, as well as the protraction and pronation of the
leg-plane. The latter are equivalent to the two degrees of freedom of the ThC
joint. Only the protraction component was analysed in this study. A sixth
marker was used to label contact position with the obstacle or extreme
positions, i.e. the frames in which a swing-stance or stance-swing transition
occurred.
Statistical analysis and error estimation
We analysed our data using non-parametric tests in SPSS software
(Statistics Package for the Social Sciences, SPSS Inc., Chicago, Il, USA): the
Wilcoxon test for pair-wise comparison (dependent samples) and the
Mann-Whitney U-test (independent samples). Circular statistics were
applied to the distributions of extreme positions. This analysis was based on
shift vectors between pairs of subsequent touch-down or lift-off positions of
each trial, determining direction and spatial extent of the shift in extreme
positions induced by perturbation. The mean vector of the entire sample was
then tested for a significant direction [Rayleigh test (see
Fischer, 1993
)]. Orientation
and length of the mean vector were also used as a measure of shift due to
coordination influences. We considered test results as statistically
significant if P=0.05. Asterisks indicate significance levels:
***, P<0.001; **, P<0.01;
*, P<0.05.
Because of our experimental arrangement (see above), video recordings could only be analysed in two dimensions. The z-component of the three-dimensional (3D) coordinates, necessary for the calculation of joint angles in Fig. 5, was computed from the difference between the real segment length and the apparent segment length measured from the video projection, considering the inclination of the leg segment. Since identical projection lengths can refer to ambiguous postures in 3D, we thoroughly examined those video sequences in question and confirmed that the FTi joint never moved below the CTr joint and that the tarsus never moved above the FTi joint.
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| Results |
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Obstacle contact led to a disruption of the swing movement. Three typical
avoidance movements are shown in Fig.
2A, which are representative examples of perturbed swing
trajectories. Fig. 2B provides
the corresponding step patterns of the same trials as in
Fig. 2A, illustrating the
impact of perturbation on walking sequences. Perturbation of a front leg swing
movement affected its trajectory and touch-down position in all behavioural
contexts (Fig. 2A). After the
initial obstacle contact, the leg remained in contact with the obstacle for
60-80 ms. Then, the leg withdrew from the obstacle, followed a caudal and
medial loop, and returned to a trajectory similar to the unperturbed movement.
Since this avoidance movement took longer than a normal swing movement, the
stance movements of all unperturbed legs temporally prolonged in straight
walking, whereas in both curve walking contexts, only the contralateral legs
prolonged their stance phases (Fig.
2B). An extremely prolonged stance phase occurs in the inner hind
leg (Fig. 2B, left step
pattern), revealing only very weak coupling to the stepping rhythm of the
other legs. This is a common feature of the step pattern during curve walking
(Dürr and Ebeling, 2005
;
Jander, 1985
) and may be
unrelated to the perturbation.
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In straight walking, swing distance of the perturbed and subsequent step decreased to about 93%, whereas in the outer leg, only the perturbed step was affected by a drop to about 88% (Fig. 3A). Swing distance of the inner leg was not affected. Avoidance movements had a significantly prolonged swing duration (132-139%; Fig. 3B), but there was no effect on the subsequent unperturbed step. Accordingly, the duty cycle dropped from 80-87% to approx. 60% in all three behavioural contexts, which shows that the prolonged swing movement is not followed by a prolonged stance movement (Fig. 3C). Stance duration depends on the overall walking velocity and varies considerably among trials (data not shown). However, stance duration of the perturbed step significantly decreased in straight walking to 83% (P<0.01) and in the inner leg to 78% (P<0.001).
Step parameters and the effect of perturbation were context-dependent, in that swing movements of the inner front leg were 23% shorter and took 8% longer than in straight walking, and 26% shorter and 13% prolonged in the outer leg. This indicates lower swing velocity in the inner front leg. In parallel, the duty cycle in inner front legs was 5-8% lower. Stance duration is lowest in the outer leg and differs by 41 and 46% from straight walking and the inner front leg, respectively.
Among trials of one behavioural context, the characteristics of obstacle contact differed in terms of timing and stimulus site. For example, perturbation could occur from soon after lift-off until just before touch-down and at any point along the tibia or tarsus. Since timing of the perturbation might have affected the avoidance reflex, statistical tests were calculated to take into account possible effects of swing velocity or limb posture. Trials were binned according to three time intervals of equal duration, equivalent to thirds of the average unperturbed swing duration. There was no systematic effect of perturbation time on any of the tested movement variables. Similarly, statistical controls were calculated by binning the trial according to three contact regions along the leg (proximal tibia, distal tibia, and tarsus). Again, no systematic effect on reflex action was found (data not shown). Thus, all data could be pooled for further analysis of reflex behaviour.
|
Qualitatively, all immediate avoidance movements of the perturbed leg appeared to lift the foot up and move it closer towards the base of the leg. Three representative single tarsus trajectories are shown in Fig. 2A. To illustrate the common trend of all avoidance movements, displacement vectors in Fig. 4 illustrate the knee and foot trajectories immediately prior to obstacle contact (Fig. 4Ai,Bi,Ci) and immediately upon release from the obstacle (Fig. 4Aii,Bii,Cii). Each arrow indicates the instantaneous direction and velocity of the displacement the FTi joint, i.e. the `knee', and of the TiTa joint, i.e. the base of the foot. Right panels show the mean displacement vector of all movements. Prior to perturbation, the TiTa joint (black arrows in Fig. 4Ai,Bi,Ci) is displaced laterally in inner legs (Fig. 4Ai), anteriorly in straight walking legs (Fig. 4Bi), and anterior-medially in outer legs (Fig. 4Ci). Displacement of the FTi joint (grey arrows) follows this pattern with lower velocity. Immediately after release of the obstacle, the TiTa joint (TiTa; dark green arrows in Fig. 4Aii,Bii,Cii) most often is displaced posterior-medially in each one of the three contexts. Again, displacement of the FTi joint (light green arrows) largely follows this pattern with lower velocity, yet with posterior displacement being more pronounced in the outer legs. The average displacement vectors in Fig. 4Aiii,Biii,Ciii illustrate that foot trajectories (TiTa) are directed into very similar directions after obstacle contact, although their direction prior to contact was very different.
Next, we analysed the relative contribution of the three leg joints. Qualitatively, this can be extracted from Fig. 4 because, owing to the degrees of freedom of the two basal leg joints, the tangential and radial components of the FTi joint displacement illustrate the action of the ThC joint and CTr joint, respectively. In contrast, the displacement of the TiTa joint reflects the combined action of all three leg joints. Note that, owing to a leverage effect, small changes of the ThC or CTr joint angles produce a much larger TiTa displacement than equal changes of the FTi joint. Fig. 5 takes a closer look at what happens at the individual joint by showing joint angle velocities prior to and after obstacle contact. Lines that cross the abscissa indicate a switch in action of the joint, i.e. an activation of the antagonistic muscles upon perturbation. The slope of each line indicates the magnitude of the change. Median joint angle velocities in Fig. 5 (arrowheads) confirm that the joint actions were context-dependent before perturbation, but reveal a default activation pattern during the avoidance movement. In straight walking, median values for each joint differ significantly from zero (Mann-Whitney U-test against zero, P<0.01), showing that all three leg joints contribute to the movement. In both curve walking contexts, the median value of only one joint significantly deviated from zero (Mann-Whitney U-test against zero, P<0.001), showing that a single joint dominated the movement before perturbation: the FTi joint causes extension in inner legs, whereas the ThC joint governs protraction in outer legs.
After perturbation, avoidance movements involved retraction, levation and flexion, irrespective of the behavioural context (Fig. 5). As can be seen by the fact that lines in Fig. 5 often cross the abscissa, and may do so in both directions, the joint action often reversed sign in response to perturbation. This might indicate that the avoidance reflex switches to antagonistic muscles, which would necessarily result in movement away from the contact surface. Alternatively, the avoidance reflex could be caused by a default activation pattern of retraction, levation, and flexion, with a non-significant number of trials deviating from this rule. To assess whether switching to antagonistic muscles provided a better explanation of the reflex action than a default activation pattern does, we calculated the relative frequencies of three reaction types on a single-trial basis. The results are shown in Table 1. The reaction types we distinguished were: switch, i.e. a sign reversal in joint angle velocity; reinforce, i.e. same sign, but with greater magnitude than before perturbation; reduce, i.e. same sign, but with decreased magnitude.
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In response to perturbation, joint action switched in the ThC and CTr joint in about 80% of all trials in straight walking, whereas joint action of the FTi joint switched only in 71.9% of trials (Table 1). In curve walking, switching was the most frequent reaction type, too, but occurred less frequently and less consistently than in straight walking (between 43.8 and 77.2%, depending on joint and context). Given that the predominant joint actions in unperturbed straight walking were protraction, depression and extension, reversal of the current motor action in all three leg joints would have resulted in retraction, levation and flexion. Across all behavioural contexts, these putative default motion components occurred with frequencies between 76.6 and 89.1%. Indeed, response type `activation of a default pattern' is more probable than switching in eight out of nine cases. This indicates that the avoidance reflex is not a result of switching to antagonistic muscles, but should be regarded as a default movement pattern of a leg, regardless of its previous movement.
Concerning the neural implementation of this default avoidance movement, it is important to note that the frequencies of concurrent retraction, levation, and flexion are nearly equal to the expected frequencies in case of their independent action, i.e. without any coupling. Accordingly, the products of PretractionxPlevationxPflexion listed in Table 2 (numbers in parentheses) hardly differ from the real frequencies in all three behavioural contexts. Whereas each one of the default motion components, retraction, levation, and flexion, was observed in about 80% of all cases (Table 1), the combination of the three of them occurred only in about 60% of all trials (Table 2). Thus, we conclude that the three leg joints are not coupled to each other during initiation of the avoidance reflex. In summary, the generation of a particular motion component during an avoidance movement is context-independent. Upon obstacle contact, joint action did not switch sign or reduce strength consistently. Instead, the default combination of retraction, levation, and flexion occurred most frequently in each of the behavioural contexts leading to the same reflex action by independent action of the leg joints.
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Impact of perturbation on leg coordination
Having analysed the response of the perturbed leg itself, we investigated
whether the impact of the altered step cycle in the perturbed leg caused a
change in coordination with neighbouring legs. As the front legs are known to
send coordinating information to the contralateral front leg and to the
ipsilateral middle leg (Cruse,
1990
; Dürr,
2005
), we focused on these two neighbours. Both spatial effects on
the location of extreme positions and temporal effects such as the delay of
lift-off in the receiver leg were analysed for context-dependency.
|
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Statistical significance of these effects was tested for by means of
circular statistics on the shift vectors with respect the unperturbed extreme
position. Shifts were considered significant if the mean direction of these
shift vectors deviated from zero [Rayleigh test (see
Fischer, 1993
)], which is
equivalent to a consistent and systematic shift in most trials. The result is
presented in Fig. 7 for the
three behavioural contexts with mean shift vectors indicating the direction
and the spatial extent of the shift. Strongest effects occurred if the inner
front leg was perturbed (Fig.
7A) in which case perturbation even affected the neighbouring
unperturbed legs and the subsequent step. In straight walking, AEPs of the
perturbed leg were shifted rearward in the perturbed and subsequent step,
whereas PEPs and AEPs of the ipsilateral middle leg and PEPs of the
contralateral front leg were only affected in the perturbed step
(Fig. 7B). Perturbation of the
outer front leg caused shifts of the AEPs of the perturbed leg and of the
ipsilateral middle leg. Moreover, PEPs of the contralateral front leg shifted,
but subsequent steps remained unaffected
(Fig. 7C).
Arcs in Fig. 7 illustrate the contribution of the front leg and middle leg ThC joints to shifts in tangential direction. Although the ThC joint lacks contribution to unperturbed steps of the inner front leg, shifts of its extreme positions due to perturbation clearly contain tangential components. In straight walking, perturbation caused only small shifts with both radial and tangential components, revealing the contribution of all leg joints (Fig. 7B). Perturbation of the outer front leg led to a rearward shift of the AEP in tangential and radial direction in the perturbed leg and to a radial outward shift of the PEP in the contralateral front leg (Fig. 7C). The latter must be due to the FTi joint. The differences between the three panels in Fig. 7 illustrate that the perturbation caused context-dependent changes on leg coordination, as extreme positions of both the perturbed sender leg and also of neighbouring receiver legs were affected to different extents.
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As for rule 2, median delays in the unperturbed reference situations were 600 or 620 ms if the sender leg was in the straight walking or inner leg context, respectively, but only 200 ms if the sender leg was an outer leg. Temporal coupling according to rule 2 was context-dependent in that perturbation caused a significant decrease in delay only if the sender leg was in the straight walking or inner leg context.
The ipsilateral middle leg receives coordinating information from the
perturbed front leg according to two further coupling mechanisms, affecting
its timing of stance-swing transition (rule 3 sensu
Cruse et al., 1995
) and the
spatial targeting of its touch-down position (rule 4 sensu
Cruse et al., 1995
;
Cruse, 1979
). According to rule
3, likelihood of lift-off in the receiver leg continuously increases during
retraction of the sender leg, i.e. increases with time after touch-down of the
sender leg. Therefore, Fig. 8B
shows the time delay between front leg AEP and PEP of the middle leg. As
expected from measurements on coupling strength of rule 3 in unperturbed
walking (Dürr, 2005
),
middle legs rarely lifted off the ground before touch-down of the front leg,
i.e. only very few values lay below zero and none in unperturbed situations.
Delays of unperturbed trials differed significantly only between outer
(median: 340 ms) and inner legs (median: 510 ms), possibly as a result of
larger scatter in the inner leg context. In perturbed steps, lift-off occurred
significantly earlier in the straight walking and outer leg context
(differences in median: straight walking 100 ms, outer leg 90 ms), but not in
the inner leg context. Thus, the effect of perturbation on coupling according
to rule 3 is context-dependent.
Finally, we analysed context-dependency and sensitivity to perturbation of
the targeting mechanism that is known to cause the middle leg (receiver leg)
to touch down near the PEP of the ipsilateral front (sender leg). In
unperturbed straight walking (Fig.
9B, black symbols), the middle leg AEPs (filled squares) lay close
to front leg PEPs (filled circles) with strongly overlapping standard
deviations (s.d.). In curve walking, middle leg AEPs and front leg PEPs
revealed a much greater distance, with front leg PEPs and middle leg AEPs
having shifted into opposite directions
(Fig. 9A,C), thus confirming
our previous results (Dürr and
Ebeling, 2005
). Nevertheless, the s.d. of middle leg AEPs remained
as small as during straight walking, indicating that the AEP remained
regulated during curve walking. In response to perturbation (open symbols),
middle leg AEPs shifted significantly more rostrally, i.e. closer towards the
front leg PEP in the straight walking context
(Fig. 9B, black symbols) and in
the outer leg context (Fig. 9C,
purple symbols). For statistics see Fig.
7 and corresponding text. Perturbation caused no significant shift
in PEP of straight walking and outer legs, but resulted in significantly
caudal shifts of the inner leg PEP. Thus the context-dependent shift of
extreme positions was even more pronounced after perturbation, because middle
leg AEPs tended to shift in walking direction whereas front leg PEPs tended to
shift posteriorly. We conclude that spatial coupling due to Cruse's targeting
mechanism is context-dependent with the effect being emphasised after
perturbation.
|
| Discussion |
|---|
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Context-independent avoidance reflex
Given the marked kinematic differences between behavioural contexts, one
could expect differences in reflex action due to factors such as swing
velocity, combination of moving joints, timing of perturbation, or location of
stimulus site. To dissociate such factors from context-dependent modulation of
reflex activity, we tested for systematic differences within each behavioural
context. Although obstacle-contact sites (proximal tibia, distal tibia and
tarsus), swing velocity and current leg position varied
(Fig. 4), there were no
significant differences in joint angle velocities after perturbation.
Similarly, avoidance movements elicited by chemical stimulation of a locust
hind leg were found to be stereotypic, irrespective of the stimulus site
(Newland, 1998
). In contrast,
tactile stimulation of the same leg tibia and femur depends on stimulus site,
and evokes different avoidance movements, each of which draws the leg most
effectively away from each stimulus
(Siegler and Burrows, 1986
).
Timing of perturbation within the swing movement had no systematic effect on
reflex joint action either, although it was correlated with the progress of
protraction and, therefore, the current position of the leg could have
influenced the output of the motor system and the reflex gain. Leg position
(Field and Coles, 1993
) and
gain changes due to previous motion
(Büschges and Wolf, 1996
)
were shown to have a systematic influence on the resistance reflex in the FTi
joint of the locust.
We conclude from our analysis that all differences of avoidance reflexes
would have resulted from context-dependency on a higher level because none of
the low-level influences such as leg position and velocity had an effect.
However, since reflexes turned out to follow a default pattern with
independent activation of all three leg joints, we found no evidence for
adaptation to the behavioural context. This is reminiscent of the
treading-on-tarsus reflex that does not adapt to forward or backward walking
in the stick insect (Schmitz and
Haßfeld, 1989
).
One can imagine two alternative mechanisms for the joint action in response
to perturbation. Firstly, avoidance movements could affect the motor action of
active muscles only and perturbation could cause switching to antagonistic
muscle groups. In this case, we should have found context-dependent
differences in the composition of motion components after perturbation due to
different patterns of muscle activities prior to perturbation
(Fig. 5). This, however, was
not the case. Rather, we found a highly similar reflex composition in the
three behavioural contexts analysed. Secondly, there could be a
context-independent activation of a set of muscle groups that generates a
default avoidance movement, regardless of joint action prior to perturbation.
In straight walking, both alternative mechanisms would cause retraction,
levation and flexion of the leg, but the second mechanism also holds true for
the two curve walking contexts (Table
1). Each behavioural context reveals about the same percentage of
each motion component of the avoidance movement: retraction, levation and
flexion (approx. 80%). The combination of these three motion components is
very similar, too (approx. 60%), suggesting independent activation of muscle
groups of different joints (Table
2). This is somewhat in contrast to the interpretation that the
composition of stereotypic avoidance movements might be due to strong
inter-joint coupling during reflex action. For example, in the stick insect,
simulated flexion of the tibia by elongation of the femoral chordotonal organ
depolarises trochanteral levator motoneurones in the active animal
(Hess and Büschges,
1997
). Inter-joint coupling was also found in the coxo-basipodite
chordotonal organ of the crayfish (LeRay
and Cattaert, 1997
), indicating a common principle in arthropods.
Our results suggest that this coupling may not always be obligatory because
the likelihood of the effect is considerably less than 100%. It is possible
that the sensory input that elicits the avoidance reflex does not cause a
common drive to motoneurone pools of different joints, but rather acts
independently on each one of them. This independent action could be either
mediated by separate afferents and interneurones or it could be due to a
sub-optimal common drive to levator, flexor and retractor motoneurone pools
which then independently reach supra-threshold activation levels, each one
with a likelihood of 80%. Compared to earlier work on insects, the high
likelihood of 77-82% of retraction being part of avoidance movements suggests
coupling of all three joints, not just between the FTi and CTr joints
(Table 1). Finally, the good
match of predicted and measured likelihood of the combined action of all three
joints (Table 2) strongly
suggests coupling via a parallel feed-forward pathway from the
reflex-triggering sensor to the motoneuron pools, rather than coupling
via joint angle sensors.
Context-dependent impact on spatial leg coordination
Obstacle contact led to an avoidance movement that temporarily deviated
from the normal swing trajectory. Associated with this deviation, touch-down
positions (AEPs) appeared more broadly scattered than in the unperturbed step
(Fig. 6B). In all behavioural
contexts, AEPs were significantly shifted rearward
(Fig. 7), resulting in a
shortened step length (Fig.
3A). This was more pronounced in curve walking
(Fig. 7A,C) than in straight
walking (Fig. 7B). Whereas
middle and hind leg AEPs are known to depend on the position of the anterior
leg (e.g. Cruse, 1979
) (see
below), front legs are thought to aim at a set AEP. After perturbation,
however, they stay short of the AEPs in the reference trials. Rather than
assuming a higher control level to trigger a step of precaution after obstacle
contact, we favour the hypothesis of a context-dependent position control
mechanism, most probably a change in the set AEP, to cause the observed
deviations. Regulation of the AEP is further supported by the finding of Dean
that targeting of hind leg swing movements is robust against external forces
(Dean, 1984
). However, the
observation that the scatter of front leg AEPs is considerably larger than
that of the position-controlled middle leg AEPs
(Fig. 6B,C) may also be an
indication of a relatively weak gain of the control loop. If so, the deviation
might not reflect a change in set point, but rather the different start
condition after termination of the avoidance reflex.
In both curve walking contexts, the deviation of the AEP after the avoidance reflex is more severe than in straight walking (Fig. 7), particularly in the tangential direction, which is due to significantly less protraction in the ThC joint. Although a context-dependent modulation of the set AEP by descending visual motion information could explain the strong difference in swing direction between unperturbed outer and inner legs, it can hardly account for the shifts observed after perturbation in these contexts. An additional shift of the set AEP due to perturbation could give rise to this effect.
Concerning spatial coordination of front and middle legs,
Fig. 9 shows that perturbation
affected targeting of middle leg AEPs towards front leg PEPs. Ipsilateral leg
pairs are known to be coupled via a so-called targeting mechanism
(Cruse, 1979
;
Dean and Wendler, 1983
). As a
putative neural substrate of this mechanism, target positions have been shown
to be coded in space by appropriate mapping of proprioreceptive information
coming from the joint angle sensors of the anterior leg
(Brunn and Dean, 1994
). Our
results suggest that middle leg targeting is subject to context-dependent
modulation. Methodologically, it is worth noting that we analysed the extreme
positions of both legs, unlike Dean and Wendler, who related the front leg
posture at the time of middle leg touch-down
(Dean and Wendler, 1982
). In
case of straight walking, the small variance of middle leg AEP and its close
proximity to front leg PEP (Fig.
9B) confirm findings of previous studies. In response to
perturbation, the middle leg AEP is shifted even slightly closer towards the
front leg PEP.
In curve walking, middle leg AEPs still vary remarkably little, indicating that the direction of swing movement remains regulated during turning. If so, touch-down is no longer targeted towards the front leg PEPs, but towards a modulated target position (Fig. 9A,C, squares). This position is shifted in the direction of heading, i.e. laterally in inner legs and medially in outer legs. In contrast, front leg PEP always shifts in the counter direction of heading. Since the AEP tends to shift in the opposite direction of the front leg PEP, perturbation leads to an increased distance between middle leg AEPs and front leg PEPs. Therefore, we suggest that the touch-down location of Cruse's targeting mechanism is modulated in different contexts. The effect of perturbation may be explained by an increase of this modulation, in which case it would be independent of behavioural context.
In contrast to previous perturbation experiments
(Cruse and Epstein, 1982
;
Dean and Wendler, 1982
), we
examined only immediate effects of perturbation on leg coordination, not
long-term adaptations to an altered load situation or the like.
Fig. 7 reveals the asymmetric
effects of perturbation on the next steps in the perturbed leg and in the two
receiver legs to which the perturbed leg is coupled. Apart from the AEP of the
perturbed leg, all other extreme positions underwent considerably stronger
shifts in the inner leg context than in the outer leg context, with
intermediate effects in the straight walking context. Theoretically, this
could have been due to asymmetric strength of coupling mechanisms. Coupling
strength is known to be much stronger between ipsilateral leg pairs than
between contralateral leg pairs
(Dürr, 2005
). Moreover,
when compared to straight walking, ipsilateral coupling strength is increased
in outer legs and decreased in inner legs. Therefore, in the present
experiments, compensatory responses of the ipsilateral and contralateral
receiver legs were likely to depend on the context of the perturbed sender
leg.
Context-dependent impact on temporal leg coordination
In Fig. 8, we analysed the
temporal coupling of the perturbed sender leg and its contralateral
(Fig. 8A) and ipsilateral
(Fig. 8B) receiver legs. In the
contralateral receiver leg, coupling mechanisms associated with Cruse's rules
1 and 2 (Cruse et al., 1995
)
should have inhibited lift-off until the swing movement of the perturbed leg
was completed (rule 1) and enhanced lift-off soon after (rule 2)
(Cruse and Knauth, 1989
). Our
results show significant effects of perturbation in the straight walking and
inner leg contexts only (Fig.
8A), i.e. in situations when the receiver leg was an outer leg or
straight walking leg. The weaker coupling of rule 1, as shown by its higher
percentage of violation, could be due to the receiver leg having been more
strongly coupled to the step rhythm of its unperturbed ipsilateral neighbour
than to its perturbed contralateral neighbour. In other words, an outer or
straight walking receiver front leg would not have `waited' until termination
of the prolonged swing phase of its obstructed contralateral neighbour, but
had lifted off in the step rhythm of its ipsilateral neighbours. Conversely,
weak ipsilateral coupling would have favoured that an inner receiver front leg
`obeyed' the contralateral rule 1, which is what we found. However, this
asymmetric ipsilateral coupling cannot explain the strengthening of rule
2-type coupling after perturbation.
In the ipsilateral receiver middle leg, the coupling mechanism associated
with Cruse's rule 3 should have increased the likelihood of lift-off with
increasing time after touch down of the perturbed leg
(Cruse and Schwarze, 1988
).
The results in Fig. 8B revealed
significant effects only in the straight walking and outer leg context. In
both cases, the delay was shortened, indicating that the receiver leg lifted
off earlier. As in the contralateral case, context-dependent strengthening of
coupling between outer legs could explain the difference between unperturbed
outer and inner legs in Fig.
8B, but cannot explain the context-dependent effect of
perturbation.
Thus, since temporal coupling was affected by perturbation, we conclude that the induced context-dependent differences in leg coordination were not simply due to asymmetric coupling strengths. Rather, at least part of the effects must have been due to context-dependent responses related to perturbation. In summary, this shows that perturbation of swing movement causes compensatory reactions in immediate limb kinematics and in inter-leg coordination. Whereas several effects on coordination depend on the current behavioural context, the kinematics of the immediate avoidance reflex is context-insensitive.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
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