Braukmann Ricarda, Bekkering Harold, Hidding Margreeth, Poljac Edita, Buitelaar Jan K, Hunnius Sabine
Radboud University Nijmegen, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Nijmegen, The Netherlands; Radboud University Medical Centre, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Radboud University Nijmegen, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Neuropsychologia. 2017 Aug;103:44-53. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2017.07.009. Epub 2017 Jul 14.
Action perception and execution are linked in the human motor system, and researchers have proposed that this action-observation matching system underlies our ability to predict observed behavior. If the motor system is indeed involved in the generation of action predictions, activation should be modulated by the degree of predictability of an observed action. This study used EEG and eye-tracking to investigate whether and how predictability of an observed action modulates motor system activation as well as behavioral predictions in the form of anticipatory eye-movements. Participants were presented with object-directed actions (e.g., making a cup of tea) consisting of three action steps which increased in their predictability. While the goal of the first step was ambiguous (e.g., when making tea, one can first grab the teabag or the cup), the goals of the following steps became predictable over the course of the action. Motor system activation was assessed by measuring attenuation of sensorimotor mu- and beta-oscillations. We found that mu- and beta-power were attenuated during observation, indicating general activation of the motor system. Importantly, predictive motor system activation, indexed by beta-band attenuation, increased for each action step, showing strongest activation prior to the final (i.e. most predictable) step. Sensorimotor activity was related to participants' predictive eye-movements which also showed a modulation by action step. Our results demonstrate that motor system activity and behavioral predictions become stronger for more predictable action steps. The functional roles of sensorimotor oscillations in predicting other's actions are discussed.
动作感知与执行在人类运动系统中相互关联,研究人员提出,这种动作观察匹配系统是我们预测所观察行为能力的基础。如果运动系统确实参与了动作预测的生成,那么激活应该会受到所观察动作可预测程度的调节。本研究使用脑电图(EEG)和眼动追踪技术,来探究所观察动作的可预测性是否以及如何调节运动系统的激活,以及以预期眼动形式表现的行为预测。研究人员向参与者展示了由三个动作步骤组成的针对物体的动作(例如,泡一杯茶),这些步骤的可预测性逐渐增加。虽然第一步的目标不明确(例如,泡茶时,可以先拿茶包或杯子),但在动作过程中,后续步骤的目标变得可预测。通过测量感觉运动μ波和β波振荡的衰减来评估运动系统的激活。我们发现,在观察过程中,μ波和β波功率衰减,表明运动系统普遍被激活。重要的是,以β波段衰减为指标的预测性运动系统激活,在每个动作步骤中都有所增加,在最后一步(即最可预测的步骤)之前表现出最强的激活。感觉运动活动与参与者的预测性眼动有关,眼动也表现出受动作步骤的调节。我们的结果表明,对于更可预测的动作步骤,运动系统活动和行为预测会变得更强。本文还讨论了感觉运动振荡在预测他人动作中的功能作用。