Mehrkanoon Saeid, Breakspear Michael, Boonstra Tjeerd W
School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia; Black Dog Institute, Sydney, Australia.
School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia; Black Dog Institute, Sydney, Australia; QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, Brisbane, Australia; Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, Australia.
Neuroimage. 2014 Oct 15;100:692-702. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.06.050. Epub 2014 Jun 30.
Recent research suggests that neural oscillations in different frequency bands support distinct and sometimes parallel processing streams in neural circuits. Studies of the neural dynamics of human motor control have primarily focused on oscillations in the beta band (15-30 Hz). During sustained muscle contractions, corticomuscular coherence is mainly present in the beta band, while coherence in the alpha (8-12 Hz) and gamma (30-80 Hz) bands has not been consistently found. Here we test the hypothesis that the frequency of corticomuscular coherence changes during transitions between sensorimotor states. Corticomuscular coherence was investigated in twelve participants making rapid transitions in force output between two targets. Corticomuscular coherence was present in the beta band during sustained contractions but vanished before movement onset, being replaced by transient synchronization in the alpha and gamma bands during dynamic force output. Analysis of the phase spectra suggested a time delay from muscle to cortex for alpha-band coherence, by contrast to a time delay from cortex to muscle for gamma-band coherence, indicating afferent and efferent corticospinal interactions respectively. Moreover, alpha and gamma-band coherence revealed distinct spatial topologies, suggesting different generative mechanisms. Coherence in the alpha and gamma bands was almost exclusively confined to trials showing a movement overshoot, suggesting a functional role related to error correction. We interpret the dual-band synchronization in the alpha and gamma bands as parallel streams of corticospinal processing involved in parsing prediction errors and generating new motor predictions.
近期研究表明,不同频段的神经振荡支持神经回路中不同且有时并行的处理流。对人类运动控制神经动力学的研究主要集中在β频段(15 - 30赫兹)的振荡。在持续的肌肉收缩过程中,皮质 - 肌肉相干性主要出现在β频段,而α频段(8 - 12赫兹)和γ频段(30 - 80赫兹)的相干性并未一直被发现。在此,我们检验一个假设,即在感觉运动状态转换期间,皮质 - 肌肉相干性的频率会发生变化。对12名参与者在两个目标之间快速改变力输出时的皮质 - 肌肉相干性进行了研究。在持续收缩期间,皮质 - 肌肉相干性存在于β频段,但在运动开始前消失,在动态力输出期间被α频段和γ频段的瞬时同步所取代。对相位谱的分析表明,α频段相干性存在从肌肉到皮质的时间延迟,而γ频段相干性存在从皮质到肌肉的时间延迟,分别表明皮质脊髓的传入和传出相互作用。此外,α频段和γ频段的相干性显示出不同的空间拓扑结构,表明存在不同的产生机制。α频段和γ频段的相干性几乎完全局限于显示运动超调的试验中,这表明其与误差校正相关的功能作用。我们将α频段和γ频段的双频段同步解释为参与解析预测误差和生成新运动预测的皮质脊髓处理的并行流。