Sale Martin V, Nydam Abbey S, Mattingley Jason B
Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, QLD, Australia; School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, The University of Queensland, QLD, Australia.
School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, QLD, Australia.
Cortex. 2017 Mar;88:32-41. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2016.12.008. Epub 2016 Dec 18.
Plasticity can be induced in human cortex using paired associative stimulation (PAS), which repeatedly and predictably pairs a peripheral electrical stimulus with transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to the contralateral motor region. Many studies have reported small or inconsistent effects of PAS. Given that uncertain stimuli can promote learning, the predictable nature of the stimulation in conventional PAS paradigms might serve to attenuate plasticity induction. Here, we introduced stimulus uncertainty into the PAS paradigm to investigate if it can boost plasticity induction. Across two experimental sessions, participants (n = 28) received a modified PAS paradigm consisting of a random combination of 90 paired stimuli and 90 unpaired (TMS-only) stimuli. Prior to each of these stimuli, participants also received an auditory cue which either reliably predicted whether the upcoming stimulus was paired or unpaired (no uncertainty condition) or did not predict the upcoming stimulus (maximum uncertainty condition). Motor evoked potentials (MEPs) evoked from abductor pollicis brevis (APB) muscle quantified cortical excitability before and after PAS. MEP amplitude increased significantly 15 min following PAS in the maximum uncertainty condition. There was no reliable change in MEP amplitude in the no uncertainty condition, nor between post-PAS MEP amplitudes across the two conditions. These results suggest that stimulus uncertainty may provide a novel means to enhance plasticity induction with the PAS paradigm in human motor cortex. To provide further support to the notion that stimulus uncertainty and prediction error promote plasticity, future studies should further explore the time course of these changes, and investigate what aspects of stimulus uncertainty are critical in boosting plasticity.
使用配对联想刺激(PAS)可在人类皮质中诱导可塑性,该方法将外周电刺激与对侧运动区的经颅磁刺激(TMS)反复且可预测地配对。许多研究报告了PAS的效果微小或不一致。鉴于不确定的刺激可以促进学习,传统PAS范式中刺激的可预测性可能会减弱可塑性的诱导。在此,我们将刺激的不确定性引入PAS范式,以研究其是否能增强可塑性诱导。在两个实验阶段中,参与者(n = 28)接受了一种改良的PAS范式,该范式由90对配对刺激和90个非配对(仅TMS)刺激的随机组合组成。在每次这些刺激之前,参与者还会收到一个听觉提示,该提示要么可靠地预测即将到来的刺激是配对还是非配对(无不确定性条件),要么不预测即将到来的刺激(最大不确定性条件)。通过拇短展肌(APB)诱发的运动诱发电位(MEP)量化了PAS前后的皮质兴奋性。在最大不确定性条件下,PAS后15分钟MEP振幅显著增加。在无不确定性条件下,MEP振幅没有可靠变化,并且在两种条件下PAS后的MEP振幅之间也没有可靠变化。这些结果表明,刺激的不确定性可能为增强人类运动皮质中PAS范式的可塑性诱导提供一种新方法。为了进一步支持刺激的不确定性和预测误差促进可塑性的观点,未来的研究应该进一步探索这些变化的时间进程,并研究刺激不确定性的哪些方面对于增强可塑性至关重要。