Department of Psychology, University of Milano-Bicocca, Piazza dell'Ateneo Nuovo, 20126, Milan, Italy.
Exp Brain Res. 2013 Feb;224(4):519-40. doi: 10.1007/s00221-012-3331-1. Epub 2012 Nov 25.
Motor imagery (M.I.) is a mental state in which real movements are evoked without overt actions. There is some behavioural evidence that M.I. declines with ageing. The neurofunctional correlates of these changes have been investigated only in two studies, but none of the these studies has measured explicit correlations between behavioural variables and the brain response, nor the correlation of M.I. and motor execution (M.E.) of the same acts in ageing. In this paper, we report a behavioural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment that aimed to address this issue. Twenty-four young subjects (27 ± 5.6 years) and twenty-four elderly subjects (60 ± 4.6 years) performed two block-design fMRI tasks requiring actual movement (M.E.) or the mental rehearsal (M.I.) of finger movements. Participants also underwent a behavioural mental chronometry test in which the temporal correlations between M.I. and M.E. were measured. We found significant neurofunctional and behavioural differences between the elderly subjects and the young subjects during the M.E. and the M.I. tasks: for the M.E. task, the elderly subjects showed increased activation in frontal and prefrontal (pre-SMA) cortices as if M.E. had become more cognitively demanding; during the M.I. task, the elderly over-recruited occipito-temporo-parietal areas, suggesting that they may also use a visual imagery strategy. We also found between-group behavioural differences in the mental chronometry task: M.I. and M.E. were highly correlated in the young participants but not in the elderly participants. The temporal discrepancy between M.I. and M.E. in the elderly subjects correlated with the brain regions that showed increased activation in the occipital lobe in the fMRI. The same index was correlated with the premotor regions in the younger subjects. These observations show that healthy elderly individuals have decreased or qualitatively different M.I. compared to younger subjects.
运动想象(MI)是一种无需明显动作即可唤起真实运动的心理状态。有一些行为证据表明,MI 随着年龄的增长而下降。这些变化的神经功能相关性仅在两项研究中进行了研究,但这两项研究都没有测量行为变量与大脑反应之间的明确相关性,也没有测量衰老过程中相同动作的 MI 与运动执行(ME)之间的相关性。在本文中,我们报告了一项行为和功能磁共振成像(fMRI)实验,旨在解决这个问题。24 名年轻受试者(27 ± 5.6 岁)和 24 名老年受试者(60 ± 4.6 岁)执行了两个需要实际运动(ME)或手指运动的心理排练(MI)的块设计 fMRI 任务。参与者还接受了行为心理计时测试,其中测量了 MI 和 ME 之间的时间相关性。我们发现,在 ME 和 MI 任务中,老年受试者与年轻受试者之间存在显著的神经功能和行为差异:对于 ME 任务,老年受试者在前额和前额(前 SMA)皮层中显示出增加的激活,好像 ME 变得更具认知挑战性;在 MI 任务中,老年人过度招募枕颞顶叶区域,这表明他们可能也使用视觉想象策略。我们还在心理计时任务中发现了组间行为差异:在年轻参与者中,MI 和 ME 高度相关,但在老年参与者中则不然。老年参与者的 MI 和 ME 之间的时间差异与 fMRI 中枕叶显示出增加激活的脑区相关。相同的指数与年轻受试者的运动前区相关。这些观察结果表明,健康的老年个体与年轻个体相比,MI 减少或质量不同。