Department of Health and Human Performance, University of Houston, Houston, TX, United States of America.
OBELAB Inc., Seoul, South Korea.
PLoS One. 2020 Nov 9;15(11):e0241562. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0241562. eCollection 2020.
The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is involved in cognitive control of motor activities and timing of future intensions. This study investigated the cognitive control of balance recovery in response to unpredictable gait perturbations and the role of PFC subregions in learning by repetition. Bilateral dorsolateral (DLPFC), ventrolateral (VLPFC), frontopolar (FPFC) and orbitofrontal (OFC) cortex hemodynamic changes induced by unpredictable slips were analyzed as a function of successive trials in ten healthy young adults. Slips were induced by the acceleration of one belt as the participant walked on a split-belt treadmill. A portable functional near-infrared spectroscope monitored PFC activities quantified by oxyhemoglobin (ΔO2Hb) and deoxyhemoglobin (ΔHbR) during the consecutive trial phases: standing, walking, slip-recovery. During the first 3 trials, the average oxyhemoglobin (ΔO2Hbavg) in the DLPFC, VLPFC, FPFC, and OFC cortex was significantly higher during slip-recovery than unperturbed walking or the standing baseline. Then, ΔO2Hbavg decreased progressively from trial-to-trial in the DLPFC, VLPFC, and FPFC, but increased and then remained constant in the OFC. The average deoxyhemoglobin (ΔHbRavg) presented mirror patterns. These changes after the third trial were paralleled by the progressive improvement of recovery revealed by kinematic variables. The results corroborate our previous hypothesis that only timing of the onset of a "good enough recovery motor program" is learned with practice. They also strongly support the assumption that the PFC contributes to the recall of pre-existing motor programs whose onset timing is adjusted by the OFC. Hence, learning is clearly divided into two steps delineated by the switch in activity of the OFC. Additionally, motor processes appear to share the working memory as well as decisional and predictive resources of the cognitive system.
前额皮质(PFC)参与运动活动的认知控制和未来意图的时间安排。本研究调查了对不可预测的步态干扰做出平衡恢复反应的认知控制,以及 PFC 亚区在重复学习中的作用。分析了 10 名健康年轻成年人在连续试验中双侧背外侧(DLPFC)、腹外侧(VLPFC)、额极(FPFC)和眶额(OFC)皮质因不可预测的滑倒而引起的血流动力学变化。通过加速一条皮带,参与者在分裂带跑步机上行走时,会引起滑倒。便携式功能近红外光谱仪监测 PFC 活动,通过连续试验阶段的氧合血红蛋白(ΔO2Hb)和脱氧血红蛋白(ΔHbR)来量化:站立、行走、滑倒恢复。在前 3 次试验中,DLPFC、VLPFC、FPFC 和 OFC 皮质的平均氧合血红蛋白(ΔO2Hbavg)在滑倒恢复期间明显高于未受干扰的行走或站立基线。然后,DLPFC、VLPFC 和 FPFC 中的ΔO2Hbavg 逐次试验逐渐降低,但在 OFC 中增加然后保持恒定。平均脱氧血红蛋白(ΔHbRavg)呈现镜像模式。第三次试验后的这些变化与运动学变量揭示的恢复逐渐改善相对应。结果与我们之前的假设相符,即只有“足够好的恢复运动程序”的起始时间是通过练习学习的。它们还强烈支持这样的假设,即 PFC 有助于回忆预先存在的运动程序,其起始时间由 OFC 调整。因此,学习明显分为两步,由 OFC 活动的转变来划定。此外,运动过程似乎与认知系统的工作记忆以及决策和预测资源共享。