Abstract.In previous work it has been shown in posture experiments of the human arm that reflexive dynamics were substantial for narrow-band stochastic force disturbances. The estimated reflex gains varied substantially with the frequency content of the disturbances. The present study analyses a simplified linear model of the reflexive feedback control loop, to provide an explanation for the observed behaviour. The model describes co-activation and reflexive feedback. The task instruction `minimize the displacements is represented mathematically by a cost function that is minimized by adjusting the parameters of the model. Small-amplitude displacements allow the system to be analysed with a quasi-linear approach. The optimization results clarify the limited effectiveness of reflexive feedback on the systems closed-loop behaviour, which emanates from the time delay present in the reflex loops. For low-frequency inputs less than 5Hz, boundary-stable solutions with high reflex gains are predicted to be optimal. Input frequencies near the systems eigenfrequency (about 5Hz), however, would be amplified and result in oscillatory behaviour. As long as the disturbance does not excite these frequencies, boundary stability will be optimal. The predicted reflex gains show a striking similarity with the estimated reflex gains from the experimental study. The present model analysis also provides a clear explanation for the negative reflex gains, estimated for near-sinusoidal inputs beyond 1.5Hz.