Abstract: | The basic principles governing trajectories of change in muscle length (henceforth referred to as "movement") were analyzed at varying rates of distributed afferent stimulation during experiments on the soleus and plantaris muscles in unanesthetized cats. The theoretical possibility of describing evoked movements within the context of a model having nonlinear hysteresis properties and dependence of dynamic parameters on direction of movement were demonstrated. A difference in static transitions between muscle contraction and lengthening was found and vice versa and retardation of movement at the start of lengthening reaction (induced by a reduced efferent stimulation rate) was more pronounced. Interaction was discovered between two disruptive influences: changes in the rate of efferent stimulation and external load, mainly due to hysteresis effects of muscle contraction. The trajectory of movement produced by alteration in one of the inputs at work (external load or afferent stimulation) is associated with the lead-up to the muscle motion, irrespective of the reason inducing the foregoing movement. Functional implications of the nonlinear dynamics of muscular contraction are discussed.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 21, No. 4, pp. 443–450, July–August, 1989. |