Department of Psychology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California.
J Neurophysiol. 2021 Jan 1;125(1):140-153. doi: 10.1152/jn.00459.2020. Epub 2020 Oct 28.
Stopping action depends on the integrity of the right inferior frontal gyrus (rIFG). Electrocorticography from the rIFG shows an increase in beta power during action stopping. Scalp EEG shows a similar right frontal beta increase, but it is unknown whether this beta modulation relates to the underlying rIFG network. Demonstrating a causal relationship between the rIFG and right frontal beta in EEG during action stopping is important for putting this electrophysiological marker on a firmer footing. In a double-blind study with a true sham coil, we used fMRI-guided 1-Hz repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) to disrupt the rIFG and to test whether this reduced right frontal beta and impaired action stopping. We found that rTMS selectively slowed stop signal reaction time (SSRT) (no effect on Go) and reduced right frontal beta (no effect on sensorimotor mu/beta related to Go); it also reduced the variance of a single-trial muscle marker of stopping. Surprisingly, sham stimulation also slowed SSRTs and reduced beta. Part of this effect, however, resulted from carryover of real stimulation in participants who received real stimulation first. A post hoc between-group comparison of those participants who received real first compared with those who received sham first showed that real stimulation reduced beta significantly more. Thus, real rTMS uniquely affected metrics of stopping in the muscle and resulted in a stronger erosion of beta. We argue that this causal test validates right frontal beta as a functional marker of action stopping. Action stopping recruits the right inferior frontal gyrus (rIFG) and elicits increases in right frontal beta. The present study now provides causal evidence linking these stopping-related beta oscillations to the integrity of the underlying rIFG network. One-hertz transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) over the rIFG impaired stopping and reduced right frontal beta during a stop-signal task. Furthermore, the effect on neural oscillations was specific to stopping-related beta, with no change in sensorimotor mu/beta corresponding to the Go response.
动作停止取决于右侧下额前回(rIFG)的完整性。来自 rIFG 的脑电描记术显示,在动作停止时β功率增加。头皮 EEG 显示出类似的右侧额叶β增加,但尚不清楚这种β调制是否与潜在的 rIFG 网络有关。在动作停止期间,在 EEG 中证明 rIFG 和右侧额叶β之间存在因果关系对于将这种电生理标志物建立在更坚实的基础上非常重要。在一项具有真实假线圈的双盲研究中,我们使用 fMRI 引导的 1Hz 重复经颅磁刺激(rTMS)来破坏 rIFG,并测试这是否降低了右侧额叶β并损害了动作停止。我们发现 rTMS 选择性地减慢了停止信号反应时间(SSRT)(对 Go 无影响)并降低了右侧额叶β(对与 Go 相关的感觉运动 mu /β无影响);它还降低了单个试验肌肉停止标志物的方差。令人惊讶的是,假刺激也会使 SSRT 变慢并降低β。但是,这种效应的一部分是由于接受真实刺激的参与者中真实刺激的延续所致。对那些先接受真实刺激的参与者与先接受假刺激的参与者进行组间事后比较显示,真实刺激可显著降低β。因此,真正的 rTMS 独特地影响了肌肉的停止指标,并导致β的侵蚀更严重。我们认为,这种因果测试验证了右侧额叶β作为动作停止的功能标志物。动作停止会招募右侧下额前回(rIFG),并引起右侧额叶β的增加。本研究现在提供了因果证据,将这些与停止相关的β振荡与潜在的 rIFG 网络的完整性联系起来。 rIFG 上的 1Hz 经颅磁刺激(TMS)会在停止信号任务中损害停止并降低右侧额叶β。此外,神经振荡的影响是特定于与停止相关的β,与 Go 反应对应的感觉运动 mu /β没有变化。