Rogojin Alica, Gorbet Diana J, Sergio Lauren E
School of Kinesiology and Health Science, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ON, M3J 1P3, Canada.
Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Exp Brain Res. 2023 Mar;241(3):793-806. doi: 10.1007/s00221-023-06561-5. Epub 2023 Feb 4.
While many of the movements we make throughout our day involve just one upper limb, most daily movements require a certain degree of coordination between both upper limbs. Historically, sex differences in eye-hand coordination have been observed. As well, there are demonstrated sex-specific differences in hemisphere symmetry, interhemispheric connectivity, and motor cortex organization. While it has been suggested that these anatomical differences may underlie sex-related differences in performance, sex differences in the functional neural correlate underlying bimanual performance have not been explicitly investigated. In the current study we tested the hypothesis that the functional connectivity underlying bimanual movement control differed depending on the sex of an individual. Participants underwent MRI scanning to acquire anatomical and functional brain images. During the functional runs, participants performed unimanual and bimanual coordination tasks using two button boxes. The tasks included pressing the buttons in time to an auditory cue with either their left or their right hand individually (unimanual), or with both hands simultaneously (bimanual). The bimanual task was further divided into either an in-phase (mirror/symmetrical) or anti-phase (parallel/asymmetrical) condition. Participants were provided with extensive training to ensure task comprehension, and performance error rates were found to be equivalent between men and women. A generalized psychophysiological interaction (gPPI) analysis was implemented to examine how functional connectivity in each condition was modulated by sex. In support of our hypothesis, women and men demonstrated differences in the neural correlates underlying unimanual and bimanual movements. In line with previous literature, functional connectivity patterns showed sex-related differences for right- vs left-hand movements. Sex-specific functional connectivity during bimanual movements was not a sum of the functional connectivity underlying right- and left-hand unimanual movements. Further, women generally showed greater interhemispheric functional connectivity across all conditions compared to men and had greater connectivity between task-related cortical areas, while men had greater connectivity involving the cerebellum. Sex differences in brain connectivity were associated with both unimanual and bimanual movement control. Not only do these findings provide novel insight into the fundamentals of how the brain controls bimanual movements in both women and men, they also present potential clinical implications on how bimanual movement training used in rehabilitation can best be tailored to the needs of individuals.
虽然我们在一天中进行的许多动作只涉及一侧上肢,但大多数日常动作都需要两侧上肢之间一定程度的协调。从历史上看,已经观察到眼手协调方面的性别差异。此外,在半球对称性、半球间连接性和运动皮层组织方面也存在明显的性别特异性差异。虽然有人认为这些解剖学差异可能是表现上性别相关差异的基础,但尚未明确研究双手动作表现背后的功能性神经关联的性别差异。在本研究中,我们测试了这样一个假设,即双手运动控制背后的功能连接因个体性别而异。参与者接受了MRI扫描,以获取大脑的解剖和功能图像。在功能扫描过程中,参与者使用两个按钮盒执行单手和双手协调任务。任务包括根据听觉提示分别用左手或右手及时按下按钮(单手),或双手同时按下按钮(双手)。双手任务进一步分为同相(镜像/对称)或反相(平行/不对称)两种情况。为确保参与者理解任务,对他们进行了大量训练,结果发现男性和女性的表现错误率相当。我们进行了广义心理生理交互作用(gPPI)分析,以研究每种情况下的功能连接如何受到性别的调节。为支持我们的假设,男性和女性在单手和双手运动的神经关联方面表现出差异。与先前的文献一致,功能连接模式显示出右手与左手运动的性别相关差异。双手运动期间的性别特异性功能连接并非右手和左手单手运动的功能连接之和。此外,与男性相比,女性在所有情况下通常表现出更强的半球间功能连接,并且在与任务相关的皮层区域之间具有更强的连接,而男性在涉及小脑的连接方面更强。大脑连接性的性别差异与单手和双手运动控制均有关联。这些发现不仅为大脑如何控制男性和女性双手运动的基本原理提供了新的见解,还对康复中使用的双手运动训练如何最好地根据个体需求进行定制提出了潜在的临床意义。