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The Autonomic Nervous System Differentiates between Levels of Motor Intent and End Effector.

Jihye RyuElizabeth Barbara Torres
Published in: Journal of personalized medicine (2020)
While attempting to bridge motor control and cognitive science, the nascent field of embodied cognition has primarily addressed intended, goal-oriented actions. Less explored, however, have been unintended motions. Such movements tend to occur largely beneath awareness, while contributing to the spontaneous control of redundant degrees of freedom across the body in motion. We posit that the consequences of such unintended actions implicitly contribute to our autonomous sense of action ownership and agency. We question whether biorhythmic activities from these motions are separable from those which intentionally occur. Here we find that fluctuations in the biorhythmic activities of the nervous systems can unambiguously differentiate across levels of intent. More important yet, this differentiation is remarkable when we examine the fluctuations in biorhythmic activity from the autonomic nervous systems. We find that when the action is intended, the heart signal leads the body kinematics signals; but when the action segment spontaneously occurs without instructions, the heart signal lags the bodily kinematics signals. We conclude that the autonomic nervous system can differentiate levels of intent. Our results are discussed while considering their potential translational value.
Keyphrases
  • heart rate variability
  • heart rate
  • heart failure
  • public health
  • atrial fibrillation
  • dendritic cells
  • white matter
  • immune response
  • mild cognitive impairment
  • multiple sclerosis
  • high resolution
  • mass spectrometry