Tan Huiling, Wade Cian, Brown Peter
Medical Research Council Brain Network Dynamics Unit at the University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3TH, United Kingdom, and Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, Oxford OX3 9DU, United Kingdom
Medical Research Council Brain Network Dynamics Unit at the University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3TH, United Kingdom, and.
J Neurosci. 2016 Feb 3;36(5):1516-28. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3204-15.2016.
Beta oscillations are a dominant feature of the sensorimotor system. A transient and prominent increase in beta oscillations is consistently observed across the sensorimotor cortical-basal ganglia network after cessation of voluntary movement: the post-movement beta synchronization (PMBS). Current theories about the function of the PMBS have been focused on either the closure of motor response or the processing of sensory afferance. Computational models of sensorimotor control have emphasized the importance of the integration between feedforward estimation and sensory feedback, and therefore the putative motor and sensory functions of beta oscillations may reciprocally interact with each other and in fact be indissociable. Here we show that the amplitude of sensorimotor PMBS is modulated by the history of visual feedback of task-relevant errors, and negatively correlated with the trial-to-trial exploratory adjustment in a sensorimotor adaptation task in young healthy human subjects. The PMBS also negatively correlated with the uncertainty associated with the feedforward estimation, which was recursively updated in light of new sensory feedback, as identified by a Bayesian learning model. These results reconcile the two opposing motor and sensory views of the function of PMBS, and suggest a unifying theory in which PMBS indexes the confidence in internal feedforward estimation in Bayesian sensorimotor integration. Its amplitude simultaneously reflects cortical sensory processing and signals the need for maintenance or adaptation of the motor output, and if necessary, exploration to identify an altered sensorimotor transformation.
For optimal sensorimotor control, sensory feedback and feedforward estimation of a movement's sensory consequences should be weighted by the inverse of their corresponding uncertainties, which require recursive updating in a dynamic environment. We show that post-movement beta activity (13-30 Hz) over sensorimotor cortex in young healthy subjects indexes the evaluation of uncertainty in feedforward estimation. Our work contributes to the understanding of the function of beta oscillations in sensorimotor control, and provides further insight into how aberrant beta activity can contribute to the pathophysiology of movement disorders.
β振荡是感觉运动系统的一个主要特征。在自愿运动停止后,整个感觉运动皮层-基底神经节网络中始终观察到β振荡的短暂且显著增加:运动后β同步化(PMBS)。目前关于PMBS功能的理论主要集中在运动反应的结束或感觉传入的处理上。感觉运动控制的计算模型强调了前馈估计与感觉反馈之间整合的重要性,因此β振荡假定的运动和感觉功能可能相互作用,实际上是不可分割的。在这里,我们表明,在年轻健康人类受试者的感觉运动适应任务中,感觉运动PMBS的幅度受与任务相关错误的视觉反馈历史的调节,并且与逐次试验的探索性调整呈负相关。PMBS也与前馈估计相关的不确定性呈负相关,如贝叶斯学习模型所确定的,这种不确定性会根据新的感觉反馈进行递归更新。这些结果调和了关于PMBS功能的两种对立的运动和感觉观点,并提出了一种统一理论,即PMBS在贝叶斯感觉运动整合中索引对内部前馈估计的信心。其幅度同时反映皮层感觉处理,并表明需要维持或调整运动输出,如有必要,进行探索以识别改变的感觉运动转换。
为了实现最佳的感觉运动控制,运动感觉后果的感觉反馈和前馈估计应根据其相应不确定性的倒数进行加权,这需要在动态环境中进行递归更新。我们表明,年轻健康受试者感觉运动皮层上的运动后β活动(13 - 30 Hz)索引了前馈估计中不确定性的评估。我们的工作有助于理解β振荡在感觉运动控制中的功能,并进一步深入了解异常β活动如何导致运动障碍的病理生理学。