Berchicci Marika, Lucci Giuliana, Spinelli Donatella, Di Russo Francesco
Department of Movement, Human and Health Sciences, University of Rome "Foro Italico" Rome, Italy.
IRCCS Santa Lucia Foundation Rome, Italy ; Department of Psychology, University of Rome 'La Sapienza' Rome, Italy.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2015 Apr 27;9:101. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2015.00101. eCollection 2015.
The aim of the study was to evaluate whether the presence/absence of visual cues specifying the onset of an upcoming, action-related stimulus modulates pre-stimulus brain activity, associated with the proactive control of goal-directed actions. To this aim we asked 12 subjects to perform an equal probability Go/No-go task with four stimulus configurations in two conditions: (1) uncued, i.e., without any external information about the timing of stimulus onset; and (2) cued, i.e., with external visual cues providing precise information about the timing of stimulus onset. During task both behavioral performance and event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded. Behavioral results showed faster response times in the cued than uncued condition, confirming existing literature. ERPs showed novel results in the proactive control stage, that started about 1 s before the motor response. We observed a slow rising prefrontal positive activity, more pronounced in the cued than the uncued condition. Further, also pre-stimulus activity of premotor areas was larger in cued than uncued condition. In the post-stimulus period, the P3 amplitude was enhanced when the time of stimulus onset was externally driven, confirming that external cueing enhances processing of stimulus evaluation and response monitoring. Our results suggest that different pre-stimulus processing come into play in the two conditions. We hypothesize that the large prefrontal and premotor activities recorded with external visual cues index the monitoring of the external stimuli in order to finely regulate the action.
本研究的目的是评估指定即将到来的、与动作相关的刺激开始的视觉线索的有无是否会调节刺激前的大脑活动,这种活动与目标导向动作的主动控制相关。为了实现这一目标,我们让12名受试者在两种条件下执行具有四种刺激配置的等概率Go/No-go任务:(1)无提示,即没有关于刺激开始时间的任何外部信息;(2)有提示,即有外部视觉线索提供关于刺激开始时间的精确信息。在任务过程中,记录了行为表现和事件相关电位(ERP)。行为结果显示,有提示条件下的反应时间比无提示条件下更快,这证实了现有文献。ERP在主动控制阶段显示出了新的结果,该阶段在运动反应前约1秒开始。我们观察到前额叶有缓慢上升的正性活动,在有提示条件下比无提示条件下更明显。此外,运动前区的刺激前活动在有提示条件下也比无提示条件下更大。在刺激后阶段,当刺激开始时间由外部驱动时,P3波幅增强,这证实了外部提示增强了刺激评估和反应监测的处理。我们的结果表明,在这两种条件下会出现不同的刺激前处理。我们假设,外部视觉线索记录到的前额叶和运动前区的大量活动表明对外部刺激的监测,以便精细地调节动作。