Quoilin Caroline, Lambert Julien, Jacob Benvenuto, Klein Pierre-Alexandre, Duque Julie
Institute of Neuroscience, Université catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium.
PLoS One. 2016 Aug 31;11(8):e0161964. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0161964. eCollection 2016.
Using instructed-delay choice reaction time (RT) paradigms, many previous studies have shown that the motor system is transiently inhibited during response preparation: motor-evoked potentials (MEPs) elicited by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) over the primary motor cortex are typically suppressed during the delay period. This effect has been observed in both selected and non-selected effectors, although MEP changes in selected effectors have been more inconsistent across task versions. Here, we compared changes in MEP amplitudes in three different variants of an instructed-delay choice RT task. All variants required participants to choose between left and right index finger movements but the responses were either provided "in the air" (Variant 1), on a regular keyboard (Variant 2), or on a response device designed to control from premature responses (Variant 3). The task variants also differed according to the visual layout (more concrete in Variant 3) and depending on whether participants received a feedback of their performance (absent in Variant 1). Behavior was globally comparable between the three variants of the task although the propensity to respond prematurely was highest in Variant 2 and lowest in Variant 3. MEPs elicited in a non-selected hand were similarly suppressed in the three variants of the task. However, significant differences emerged when considering MEPs elicited in the selected hand: these MEPs were suppressed in Variants 1 and 3 whereas they were often facilitated in Variant 2, especially in the right dominant hand. In conclusion, MEPs elicited in selected muscles seem to be more sensitive to small variations to the task design than those recorded in non-selected effectors, probably because they reflect a complex combination of inhibitory and facilitatory influences on the motor output system. Finally, the use of a standard keyboard seems to be particularly inappropriate because it encourages participants to respond promptly with no means to control for premature responses, probably increasing the relative amount of facilitatory influences at the time motor inhibition is probed.
使用指令延迟选择反应时(RT)范式,许多先前的研究表明,在反应准备过程中运动系统会被短暂抑制:在初级运动皮层上通过经颅磁刺激(TMS)诱发的运动诱发电位(MEP)在延迟期通常会被抑制。这种效应在选定和未选定的效应器中均有观察到,尽管选定效应器中的MEP变化在不同任务版本中更不一致。在这里,我们比较了指令延迟选择RT任务的三种不同变体中MEP振幅的变化。所有变体都要求参与者在左手和右手食指运动之间进行选择,但反应要么是“在空中”做出(变体1),在普通键盘上做出(变体2),要么是在设计用于控制过早反应的反应装置上做出(变体3)。任务变体在视觉布局上也有所不同(变体3中更具体),并且取决于参与者是否收到其表现的反馈(变体1中没有)。尽管过早反应的倾向在变体2中最高,在变体3中最低,但任务的这三种变体之间的行为总体上是可比的。在任务的三种变体中,未选定手诱发的MEP同样受到抑制。然而,在考虑选定手诱发的MEP时出现了显著差异:这些MEP在变体1和3中受到抑制,而在变体2中通常会得到促进,尤其是在右优势手中。总之,选定肌肉中诱发的MEP似乎比未选定效应器中记录的MEP对任务设计的微小变化更敏感,这可能是因为它们反映了对运动输出系统的抑制性和促进性影响的复杂组合。最后,使用标准键盘似乎特别不合适,因为它鼓励参与者迅速做出反应,而没有控制过早反应的手段,这可能会增加在探测运动抑制时促进性影响的相对量。