Edith Ribot-Ciscar
Aix-Marseille University
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Featured researches published by Edith Ribot-Ciscar.
The Journal of Physiology | 2007
Jean-Marc Aimonetti; Valérie Hospod; Jean-Pierre Roll; Edith Ribot-Ciscar
The aim of this study was to analyse the directional coding of two‐dimensional limb movements by cutaneous afferents from skin areas covering a multidirectional joint, the ankle. The activity of 89 cutaneous afferents was recorded in the common peroneal nerve, and the mean discharge frequency of each unit was measured during the outward phase of ramp and hold movements imposed in 16 different directions. Forty‐two afferents responded to the movements in the following decreasing order (SA2, n= 24/27; FA2, n= 13/17; FA1, n= 3/24; SA1, n= 2/21). All the units activated responded to a specific range of directions, defining their ‘preferred sector’, within which their response peaked in a given direction, their ‘preferred direction’. Based on the distribution of the preferred directions, two populations of afferents, and hence two skin areas were defined: the anterior and the external lateral parts of the leg. As the directional tuning of each population was cosine shaped, the neuronal population vector model was applied and found to efficiently describe the movement direction encoded by cutaneous afferents, as it has been previously reported for muscle afferents. The responses of cutaneous afferents were then considered with respect to those of the afferents from the underlying muscles, which were previously investigated, and an almost perfect matching of directional sensitivity was observed. It is suggested that the common movement‐encoding characteristics exhibited by cutaneous and muscle afferents, as early as the peripheral level, may facilitate the central co‐processing of their feedbacks subserving kinaesthesia.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007
Valérie Hospod; Jean-Marc Aimonetti; Jean-Pierre Roll; Edith Ribot-Ciscar
The aim of the present study was to test whether fusimotor control of human muscle spindle sensitivity changed when attention was selectively directed to the recognition of an imposed two-dimensional movement in the form of a written symbol. The unitary activities of 32 muscle spindle afferents (26 Ia, 6 II) were recorded by microneurography at the level of the common peroneal nerve. The patterns of firing rate in response to passive movements of the ankle, forming different letters or numbers, were compared in two conditions: control and recognition. No visual cues were given in either condition, but subjects had to recognize and name the character in one condition compared with not paying attention in the control condition. The results showed that 58% of the tested Ia afferents presented modified responses to movements when these had to be recognized. Changes in Ia afferent responses included decreased depth of modulation, increased variability of discharge, and changes in spontaneous activity. Not all changes were evident in the same afferent. Furthermore, the percentage of correctly recognized movements amounted to 63% when changes were observed, but it was only 48% when the primary ending sensitivity was unaltered. The responses of group II afferents were only weakly changed or unchanged. It is suggested that the altered muscle spindle sensitivity is because of selective changes in fusimotor control, the consequence of which might be to feed the brain movement trajectory information that is more accurate.
Journal of Neurophysiology | 2009
Edith Ribot-Ciscar; Valérie Hospod; Jean-Pierre Roll; Jean-Marc Aimonetti
The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the fusimotor control of muscle spindle sensitivity may depend on the movement parameter the task is focused on, either the velocity or the final position reached. The unitary activities of 18 muscle spindle afferents were recorded by microneurography at the common peroneal nerve. We compared in two situations the responses of muscle spindle afferents to ankle movements imposed while the subject was instructed not to pay attention to or to pay attention to the movement, both in the absence of visual cues. In the two situations, three ramp-and-hold movements were imposed in random order. In one situation, the three movements differed by their velocity and in the other by the final position reached. The task consisted in ranking the three movements according to the parameter under consideration (for example, slow, fast, and medium). The results showed that paying attention to movement velocity gave rise to a significant increase in the dynamic and static responses of muscle afferents. In contrast, focusing attention on the final position reached made the muscle spindle feedback better discriminate the different positions and depressed its capacity to discriminate movement velocities. Changes are interpreted as reflecting dynamic and static gamma activation, respectively. The present results support the view that the fusimotor drive depends on the parameter the task is focused on, so that the muscle afferent feedback is adjusted to the task requirements.
Journal of Neurophysiology | 2009
Jean-Pierre Roll; Frédéric Albert; Chloé Thyrion; Edith Ribot-Ciscar; Mikael Bergenheim; Benjamin Mattei
In humans, tendon vibration evokes illusory sensation of movement. We developed a model mimicking the muscle afferent patterns corresponding to any two-dimensional movement and checked its validity by inducing writing illusory movements through specific sets of muscle vibrators. Three kinds of illusory movements were compared. The first was induced by vibration patterns copying the responses of muscle spindle afferents previously recorded by microneurography during imposed ankle movements. The two others were generated by the model. Sixteen different vibratory patterns were applied to 20 motionless volunteers in the absence of vision. After each vibration sequence, the participants were asked to name the corresponding graphic symbol and then to reproduce the illusory movement perceived. Results showed that the afferent patterns generated by the model were very similar to those recorded microneurographically during actual ankle movements (r=0.82). The model was also very efficient for generating afferent response patterns at the wrist level, if the preferred sensory directions of the wrist muscle groups were first specified. Using recorded and modeled proprioceptive patterns to pilot sets of vibrators placed at the ankle or wrist levels evoked similar illusory movements, which were correctly identified by the participants in three quarters of the trials. Our proprioceptive model, based on neurosensory data recorded in behaving humans, should then be a useful tool in fields of research such as sensorimotor learning, rehabilitation, and virtual reality.
Experimental Brain Research | 1991
Edith Ribot-Ciscar; M.F. Tardy-Gervet; Jp Vedel; Jean-Pierre Roll
SummaryThe activities of human muscle spindle primary endings were recorded in the lateral peroneal nerve using the microneurographic method. The aim of the study was to test whether voluntary isometric contraction causes any after-effects, first in the resting discharge of muscle spindle primary endings and secondly in their responses to a slow ramp stretch. To investigate the latter point, the initial angular position of the ankle was passively adjusted until the unit fell silent, in order to introduce a delay in the responses to muscle stretch. The results were as follows: (1) most of the units did not exhibit the “post-contraction sensory discharge” reported to occur in numerous animal experiments; this means that the muscle spindle resting discharge was essentially the same before and after isometric voluntary contraction. (2) Isometric voluntary contraction led to changes in muscle spindle stretch sensitivity which resulted in a reduction in the stretch threshold and a decrease in the muscle spindle dynamic sensitivity. These data suggest that the after-effects observed may have been triggered by static fusimotor neurones. The results are discussed with reference to the theory according to which the processing by the CNS of muscular proprioceptive messages deals mainly with signals arising from muscles stretched during movement, and it is concluded that the coactivation of α and y motoneurones during the contraction facilitates the coding of the parameters of forthcoming stretching movements, by the muscle spindles.
Archive | 1999
Mikael Bergenheim; Jean-Pierre Roll; Edith Ribot-Ciscar
The microneurographic technique allows the researcher to observe and monitor the continuous ongoing neural activity of peripheral nerves in awake human subjects. It enables the study of both multiunit and single neuronal activities in practically all kinds of nerve fibers regardless of size or myelinization. The scientist has the possibility to correlate neuronal activity with peripheral stimuli, vegetative and motoric activity, as well as subjective experience. The technique is a relatively new one (first publication by Hagbarth and Vallbo in 1967), but has already attracted neuroscientists working in many different areas of the nervous system, in both normal and pathological conditions. During the 30 or so years the technique has been available, it has enabled major scientific advances in many of these areas.
Textile Research Journal | 2006
Cécile Breugnot; Marie-Ange Bueno; Marc Renner; Edith Ribot-Ciscar; Jean-Marc Aimonetti; Jean-Pierre Roll
Fabrics with more and more elaborate tactile properties are available on the textile market. However the specifications of the textile products do not feature their touch because this can not be measured precisely and objectively enough. Some measurement methods of the mechanical properties involved in tactile feeling have been developed. Nevertheless, a purely mechanical approach is not sufficient. Therefore, the human being was utilized as a touch sensor. The tactile afferent [i.e. conveyed to the central nervous system, centripetal] messages elicited by the mechanoreceptors of the skin in response to textile stimuli and which were propagated along the sensitive nervous fibers up to the brain were studied. These messages were recorded on conscious human individuals, by a method named microneurography. The aim of this study was to use the neurosensory results in order to improve the mechanical measurement methods for the characterization of the surface state of fabrics. The samples tested had undergone different emery finishing processes. The preliminary results of the microneurographic study highlight the importance of taking account of the effect along/against the main direction of the hairiness. In fact, the discrimination of different hairy fabrics by cutaneous mechanoreceptors is only achieved when the fabrics stroke the skin against the main direction of the hairiness. A friction device developed by the co-authors was modified in term of signal processing in order to measure the surface along and against the main direction of the hairiness separately. Moreover, the probe was improved in order to separate the mechanical behavior information on hairiness from the roughness information. The results obtained with this new method were compared with results obtained using the surface tester of the KES-F.
Muscle & Nerve | 2004
Jane E. Butler; Edith Ribot-Ciscar; Inge Zijdewind; Christine K. Thomas
The aim of this study was to evaluate whether increases in blood pressure, and presumably muscle perfusion pressure, improve the endurance of thenar muscles paralyzed chronically by cervical spinal cord injury (SCI). Resting mean arterial pressure (MAP) was low in all eight subjects (64 ± 2 mmHg). Muscle fatigue (force decline) was produced on 2 days by intermittent supramaximal electrical stimulation of the median nerve at 20 Hz for 2 min. During one of the fatigue tests, a concurrent sustained voluntary contraction of the contralateral elbow flexors was used to increase resting MAP (by 22%, on average). Although this change in blood pressure resulted in no significant change in mean fatigue for the group, changes in MAP with exercise (median nerve stimulation with and without voluntary contraction) correlated with changes in thenar muscle fatigue in seven subjects. For every 10% increase in MAP, fatigue was reduced by ∼3%. The data suggest that low blood pressure after chronic cervical SCI and poor blood pressure control during exercise exacerbate the fatigability of paralyzed muscles. Muscle Nerve 29: 575–584, 2004
Experimental Brain Research | 2012
Jean-Marc Aimonetti; Jean-Pierre Roll; Valérie Hospod; Edith Ribot-Ciscar
We analyzed the cutaneous encoding of two-dimensional movements by investigating the coding of movement velocity for differently oriented straight-line movements and the coding of complex trajectories describing cursive letters. The cutaneous feedback was then compared with that of the underlying muscle afferents previously recorded during the same “writing-like” movements. The unitary activity of 43 type II cutaneous afferents was recorded in the common peroneal nerve in healthy subjects during imposed ankle movements. These movements consisted first of ramp-and-hold movements imposed at two different and close velocities in seven directions and secondly of “writing-like” movements. In both cases, the responses were analyzed using the neuronal population vector model. The results show that movement velocity encoding depended on the direction of the ongoing movement. Discriminating between two velocities therefore involved processing the activity of afferent populations located in the various skin areas surrounding the moving joint, as shown by the statistically significant difference observed in the amplitude of the sum vectors. Secondly, “writing-like” movements induced cutaneous neuronal patterns of activity, which were reproducible and specific to each trajectory. Lastly, the “cutaneous neuronal trajectories,” built by adding the sum vectors tip-to-tail, nearly matched both the movement trajectories and the “muscle neuronal trajectories,” built from previously recorded muscle afferents. It was concluded that type II cutaneous and the underlying muscle afferents show similar encoding properties of two-dimensional movement parameters. This similarity is discussed in relation to a central gating process that would for instance increase the gain of cutaneous inputs when muscle information is altered by the fusimotor drive.
Experimental Brain Research | 2016
L. Borel; Edith Ribot-Ciscar
The application of subthreshold mechanical vibrations with random frequencies (white mechanical noise) to ankle muscle tendons is known to increase muscle proprioceptive information and to improve the detection of ankle movements. The aim of the present study was to analyze the effect of this mechanical noise on postural control, its possible modulation according to the sensory strategies used for postural control, and the consequences of increasing postural difficulty. The upright stance of 20 healthy young participants tested with their eyes closed was analyzed during the application of four different levels of noise and compared to that in the absence of noise (control) in three conditions: static, static on foam, and dynamic (sinusoidal translation). The quiet standing condition was conducted with the eyes open and closed to determine the subjects’ visual dependency to maintain postural stability. Postural performance was assessed using posturographic and motion analysis evaluations. The results in the static condition showed that the spectral power density of body sway significantly decreased with an optimal level of noise and that the higher the spectral power density without noise, the greater the noise effect, irrespective of visual dependency. Finally, noise application was ineffective in the foam and dynamic conditions. We conclude that the application of mechanical noise to ankle muscle tendons is a means to improve quiet standing only. These results suggest that mechanical noise stimulation may be more effective in more impaired populations.