Research Center of Movement Control and Neuroplasticity, Department of Biomedical Kinesiology, Group Biomedical Sciences, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Tervuursevest 101 - B-3001 Heverlee, Belgium.
Eur J Neurosci. 2010 Mar;31(6):1144-53. doi: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2010.07124.x.
Several transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) studies have reported facilitation of the primary motor cortex (M1) during the mere observation of actions. This facilitation was shown to be highly congruent, in terms of somatotopy, with the observed action, even at the level of single muscles. With the present study, we investigated whether this muscle-specific facilitation of the observer's motor system reflects the degree of muscular force that is exerted in an observed action. Two separate TMS experiments are reported in which corticospinal excitability was measured in the hand area of M1 while subjects observed the lifting of objects of different weights. The type of action 'grasping-and-lifting-the-object' was always identical, but the grip force varied according to the object's weight. In accordance to previous findings, excitability of M1 was shown to modulate in a muscle-specific way, such that only the cortical representation areas in M1 that control the specific muscles used in the observed lifting action became increasingly facilitated. Moreover, muscle-specific M1 facilitation was shown to modulate to the force requirements of the observed actions, such that M1 excitability was considerably higher when observing heavy object lifting compared with light object lifting. Overall, these results indicate that different levels of observed grip force are mirrored onto the observer's motor system in a highly muscle-specific manner. The measured force-dependent modulations of corticospinal excitability in M1 are hypothesized to be functionally relevant for scaling the observed grip force in the observer's own motor system. In turn, this mechanism may contribute, at least partly, to the observer's ability to infer the weight of the lifted object.
几项经颅磁刺激(TMS)研究报告称,在单纯观察动作时,初级运动皮层(M1)会得到促进。这种促进在躯体感觉上与观察到的动作高度一致,甚至在单个肌肉水平上也是如此。在本研究中,我们研究了观察者运动系统的这种肌肉特异性促进是否反映了在观察到的动作中施加的肌肉力量的程度。报告了两个单独的 TMS 实验,在这些实验中,当受试者观察不同重量的物体举起时,测量了 M1 手部区域的皮质脊髓兴奋性。动作类型“抓握和举起物体”始终相同,但根据物体的重量,握力会有所不同。与先前的发现一致,M1 的兴奋性以肌肉特异性的方式进行调节,使得只有控制观察到的提升动作中使用的特定肌肉的 M1 皮质代表区域变得越来越活跃。此外,M1 的肌肉特异性促进被证明可以调节观察到的动作的力要求,因此,当观察重物举起时,M1 兴奋性比观察轻物举起时要高得多。总的来说,这些结果表明,不同水平的观察到的握力以高度肌肉特异性的方式反映在观察者的运动系统中。在 M1 中测量的与力相关的皮质脊髓兴奋性的调制被假设与观察者自身运动系统中观察到的握力的比例有关。反过来,这种机制可能至少部分地有助于观察者推断举起物体的重量的能力。