Kelly Rachel, Mizelle J C, Wheaton Lewis A
Cognitive Motor Control Laboratory, School of Applied Physiology, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Cognitive Motor Control Laboratory, School of Applied Physiology, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA; Center for Visual and Neurocognitive Rehabilitation, Atlanta Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Decatur, GA, USA.
Neuropsychologia. 2015 Aug;75:20-9. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2015.05.016. Epub 2015 May 22.
Prior work has demonstrated that perspective and handedness of observed actions can affect action understanding differently in right and left-handed persons, suggesting potential differences in the neural networks underlying action understanding between right and left-handed individuals. We sought to evaluate potential differences in these neural networks using electroencephalography (EEG). Right- and left-handed participants observed images of tool-use actions from egocentric and allocentric perspectives, with right- and left-handed actors performing the actions. Participants judged the outcome of the observed actions, and response accuracy and latency were recorded. Behaviorally, the highest accuracy and shortest latency was found in the egocentric perspective for right- and left-handed observers. Handedness of subject showed an effect on accuracy and latency also, where right-handed observers were faster to respond than left-handed observers, but on average were less accurate. Mu band (8-10 Hz) cortico-cortical coherence analysis indicated that right-handed observers have coherence in the motor dominant left parietal-premotor networks when looking at an egocentric right or allocentric left hands. When looking in an egocentric perspective at a left hand or allocentric right hand, coherence was lateralized to right parietal-premotor areas. In left-handed observers, bilateral parietal-premotor coherence patterns were observed regardless of actor handedness. These findings suggest that the cortical networks involved in understanding action outcomes are dependent on hand dominance, and notably right handed participants seem to utilize motor systems based on the limb seen performing the action. The decreased accuracy for right-handed participants on allocentric images could be due to asymmetrical lateralization of encoding action and motoric dominance, which may interfere with translating allocentric limb action outcomes. Further neurophysiological studies will determine the specific processes of how left- and right-handed participants understand actions.
先前的研究表明,观察到的动作的视角和用手习惯会对右利手和左利手个体的动作理解产生不同影响,这表明右利手和左利手个体在动作理解背后的神经网络存在潜在差异。我们试图使用脑电图(EEG)评估这些神经网络中的潜在差异。右利手和左利手参与者从自我中心和异我中心视角观察工具使用动作的图像,由右利手和左利手的演员执行这些动作。参与者判断观察到的动作的结果,并记录反应准确性和反应潜伏期。在行为上,右利手和左利手观察者在自我中心视角下的准确性最高,潜伏期最短。受试者的用手习惯也对准确性和潜伏期有影响,右利手观察者的反应比左利手观察者更快,但平均准确性较低。μ频段(8 - 10赫兹)皮质 - 皮质相干性分析表明,右利手观察者在以自我中心视角看右手或异我中心视角看左手时,运动优势半球的左顶叶 - 运动前区网络存在相干性。当以自我中心视角看左手或异我中心视角看右手时,相干性偏向右侧顶叶 - 运动前区。在左利手观察者中,无论演员的用手习惯如何,均观察到双侧顶叶 - 运动前区的相干模式。这些发现表明,参与理解动作结果的皮质网络依赖于手的优势,特别是右利手参与者似乎根据看到执行动作的肢体来利用运动系统。右利手参与者在异我中心图像上准确性降低可能是由于动作编码和运动优势的不对称偏侧化,这可能会干扰对异我中心肢体动作结果的转换。进一步的神经生理学研究将确定左利手和右利手参与者理解动作的具体过程。