Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, London, UK.
FMRIB Centre, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neuroscience, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Brain. 2018 May 1;141(5):1422-1433. doi: 10.1093/brain/awy054.
The human brain contains multiple hand-selective areas, in both the sensorimotor and visual systems. Could our brain repurpose neural resources, originally developed for supporting hand function, to represent and control artificial limbs? We studied individuals with congenital or acquired hand-loss (hereafter one-handers) using functional MRI. We show that the more one-handers use an artificial limb (prosthesis) in their everyday life, the stronger visual hand-selective areas in the lateral occipitotemporal cortex respond to prosthesis images. This was found even when one-handers were presented with images of active prostheses that share the functionality of the hand but not necessarily its visual features (e.g. a 'hook' prosthesis). Further, we show that daily prosthesis usage determines large-scale inter-network communication across hand-selective areas. This was demonstrated by increased resting state functional connectivity between visual and sensorimotor hand-selective areas, proportional to the intensiveness of everyday prosthesis usage. Further analysis revealed a 3-fold coupling between prosthesis activity, visuomotor connectivity and usage, suggesting a possible role for the motor system in shaping use-dependent representation in visual hand-selective areas, and/or vice versa. Moreover, able-bodied control participants who routinely observe prosthesis usage (albeit less intensively than the prosthesis users) showed significantly weaker associations between degree of prosthesis observation and visual cortex activity or connectivity. Together, our findings suggest that altered daily motor behaviour facilitates prosthesis-related visual processing and shapes communication across hand-selective areas. This neurophysiological substrate for prosthesis embodiment may inspire rehabilitation approaches to improve usage of existing substitutionary devices and aid implementation of future assistive and augmentative technologies.
人类大脑包含多个手选择区域,分布在感觉运动和视觉系统中。我们的大脑能否重新利用原本用于支持手部功能的神经资源,来表示和控制义肢?我们使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)研究了天生或后天失去手部的个体(以下简称单手者)。我们发现,单手者在日常生活中越频繁地使用义肢(假肢),他们外侧枕颞叶皮质的视觉手选择区域对假肢图像的反应就越强。即使当单手者看到的是具有手部功能但不一定具有手部视觉特征的主动假肢(例如“钩子”假肢)时,也会出现这种情况。此外,我们还发现,日常使用义肢会决定手选择区域之间的大规模网络间通信。这可以通过视觉和感觉运动手选择区域之间静息状态功能连接的增加来证明,其程度与日常义肢使用的强度成正比。进一步的分析表明,假肢活动、视动连接和使用之间存在 3 倍的耦合,这表明运动系统可能在手选择区域的视觉表示中发挥作用,或者反之亦然。此外,身体健康的对照组参与者经常观察义肢的使用(尽管不如义肢使用者那么频繁),但他们在观察义肢的程度与视觉皮层活动或连接之间的相关性明显较弱。综上所述,我们的研究结果表明,改变日常运动行为可以促进与假肢相关的视觉处理,并塑造手选择区域之间的通讯。这种与假肢相关的体感神经生理基础可能为改善现有替代设备的使用提供康复方法,并为未来的辅助和增强技术的实现提供帮助。