Cardiff University Brain Research Imaging Centre, School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK.
J Neurophysiol. 2010 Nov;104(5):2873-85. doi: 10.1152/jn.00607.2010. Epub 2010 Sep 8.
Gamma oscillations in human primary motor cortex (M1) have been described in human electrocorticographic and noninvasive magnetoencephalographic (MEG)/electroencephalographic recordings, yet their functional significance within the sensorimotor system remains unknown. In a set of four MEG experiments described here a number of properties of these oscillations are elucidated. First, gamma oscillations were reliably localized by MEG in M1 and reached peak amplitude 137 ms after electromyographic onset and were not affected by whether movements were cued or self-paced. Gamma oscillations were found to be stronger for larger movements but were absent during the sustained part of isometric movements, with no finger movement or muscle shortening. During repetitive movement sequences gamma oscillations were greater for the first movement of a sequence. Finally, gamma oscillations were absent during passive shortening of the finger compared with active contractions sharing similar kinematic properties demonstrating that M1 oscillations are not simply related to somatosensory feedback. This combined pattern of results is consistent with gamma oscillations playing a role in a relatively late stage of motor control, encoding information related to limb movement rather than to muscle contraction.
人类初级运动皮层(M1)中的伽马振荡已在人类脑电描记和非侵入性脑磁图(MEG)/脑电图记录中被描述,但其在感觉运动系统中的功能意义尚不清楚。在本文描述的四组 MEG 实验中,阐明了这些振荡的一些特性。首先,MEG 可靠地在 M1 中定位伽马振荡,在肌电图起始后 137 毫秒达到峰值幅度,并且不受运动是提示还是自我调节的影响。发现伽马振荡在较大运动时更强,但在等长运动的持续部分不存在,没有手指运动或肌肉缩短。在重复运动序列中,序列中的第一个运动伽马振荡更强。最后,与具有相似运动学特性的主动收缩相比,手指的被动缩短期间没有伽马振荡,表明 M1 振荡与躯体感觉反馈无关。这种综合的结果模式表明,伽马振荡在运动控制的相对后期阶段发挥作用,对与肢体运动相关的信息进行编码,而不是与肌肉收缩相关。