Cunnington Ross, Windischberger Christian, Robinson Simon, Moser Ewald
The Howard Florey Institute, and Centre for Neuroscience, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Neuroimage. 2006 Feb 15;29(4):1294-302. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2005.09.028. Epub 2005 Oct 24.
Whenever we plan, imagine, or observe an action, the motor systems that would be involved in preparing and executing that action are similarly engaged. The way in which such common motor activation is formed, however, is likely to differ depending on whether it arises from our own intentional selection of action or from the observation of another's action. In this study, we use time-resolved event-related functional MRI to tease apart neural processes specifically related to the processing of observed actions, the selection of our own intended actions, the preparation for movement, and motor response execution. Participants observed a finger gesture movement or a cue indicating they should select their own finger gesture to perform, followed by a 5-s delay period; participants then performed the observed or self-selected action. During the preparation and readiness for action, prior to initiation, we found activation in a common network of higher motor areas, including dorsal and ventral premotor areas and the pre-supplementary motor area (pre-SMA); the more caudal SMA showed greater activation during movement execution. Importantly, the route to this common motor activation differed depending on whether participants freely selected the actions to perform or whether they observed the actions performed by another person. Observation of action specifically involved activation of inferior and superior parietal regions, reflecting involvement of the dorsal visual pathway in visuomotor processing required for planning the action. In contrast, the selection of action specifically involved the dorsal lateral prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortex, reflecting the role of these prefrontal areas in attentional selection and guiding the selection of responses.
每当我们计划、想象或观察一个动作时,参与准备和执行该动作的运动系统也会同样被激活。然而,这种共同运动激活的形成方式可能会因它是源于我们自己对动作的有意选择还是对他人动作的观察而有所不同。在本研究中,我们使用时间分辨事件相关功能磁共振成像来区分与观察到的动作处理、我们自己预期动作的选择、运动准备以及运动反应执行具体相关的神经过程。参与者观察一个手指手势动作或一个提示,该提示表明他们应选择自己的手指手势来执行,随后有一个5秒的延迟期;然后参与者执行观察到的或自我选择的动作。在动作准备和就绪阶段,即在动作开始之前,我们发现在一个包括背侧和腹侧运动前区以及前辅助运动区(pre-SMA)在内的高级运动区共同网络中有激活;在运动执行过程中,更靠尾侧的辅助运动区显示出更大的激活。重要的是,通向这种共同运动激活的途径因参与者是自由选择要执行的动作还是观察他人执行的动作而有所不同。观察动作特别涉及到顶叶上下部区域的激活,这反映了背侧视觉通路在计划动作所需的视觉运动处理中的参与。相比之下,动作选择特别涉及背外侧前额叶和前扣带回皮质,这反映了这些前额叶区域在注意力选择和指导反应选择中的作用。