Kajal Diljit Singh, Braun Christoph, Mellinger Jürgen, Sacchet Matthew D, Ruiz Sergio, Fetz Eberhard, Birbaumer Niels, Sitaram Ranganatha
Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Neurobiology, Tübingen, 72076, Germany.
MEG-Center, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, 72076, Germany.
Hum Brain Mapp. 2017 Sep;38(9):4353-4369. doi: 10.1002/hbm.23663. Epub 2017 Jun 5.
Bimanual movements involve the interactions between both primary motor cortices. These interactions are assumed to involve phase-locked oscillatory brain activity referred to as inter-hemispheric functional coupling. So far, inter-hemispheric functional coupling has been investigated as a function of motor performance. These studies report mostly a negative correlation between the performance in motor tasks and the strength of functional coupling. However, correlation might not reflect a causal relationship. To overcome this limitation, we opted for an alternative approach by manipulating the strength of inter-hemispheric functional coupling and assessing bimanual motor performance as a dependent variable. We hypothesize that an increase/decrease of functional coupling deteriorates/facilitates motor performance in an out-of-phase bimanual finger-tapping task. Healthy individuals were trained to volitionally regulate functional coupling in an operant conditioning paradigm using real-time magnetoencephalography neurofeedback. During operant conditioning, two discriminative stimuli were associated with upregulation and downregulation of functional coupling. Effects of training were assessed by comparing motor performance prior to (pre-test) and after the training (post-test). Participants receiving contingent feedback learned to upregulate and downregulate functional coupling. Comparing motor performance, as indexed by the ratio of tapping speed for upregulation versus downregulation trials, no change was found in the control group between pre- and post-test. In contrast, the group receiving contingent feedback evidenced a significant decrease of the ratio implicating lower tapping speed with stronger functional coupling. Results point toward a causal role of inter-hemispheric functional coupling for the performance in bimanual tasks. Hum Brain Mapp 38:4353-4369, 2017. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
双手运动涉及两个初级运动皮层之间的相互作用。这些相互作用被认为涉及被称为半球间功能耦合的锁相振荡脑活动。到目前为止,半球间功能耦合已作为运动表现的函数进行了研究。这些研究大多报告了运动任务表现与功能耦合强度之间的负相关。然而,相关性可能并不反映因果关系。为了克服这一局限性,我们选择了另一种方法,即操纵半球间功能耦合的强度,并将双手运动表现作为因变量进行评估。我们假设,在异相双手手指敲击任务中,功能耦合的增加/减少会使运动表现恶化/促进。健康个体在操作性条件反射范式中使用实时脑磁图神经反馈进行训练,以自主调节功能耦合。在操作性条件反射过程中,两种辨别性刺激与功能耦合的上调和下调相关联。通过比较训练前(预测试)和训练后(后测试)的运动表现来评估训练效果。接受偶然反馈的参与者学会了上调和下调功能耦合。比较运动表现,以上调试验与下调试验的敲击速度之比为指标,对照组在预测试和后测试之间没有发现变化。相比之下,接受偶然反馈的组显示该比率显著下降,这意味着功能耦合越强,敲击速度越低。结果表明半球间功能耦合在双手任务表现中起因果作用。《人类大脑图谱》38:4353 - 4369,2017年。© 2017威利期刊公司。