Faculty of Biomedical Engineering, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 3200003, Israel
Faculty of Biomedical Engineering, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 3200003, Israel.
J Neurosci. 2023 Jul 5;43(27):5030-5044. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2170-22.2023. Epub 2023 May 26.
Human motor behavior involves planning and execution of actions, some more frequently. Manipulating probability distribution of a movement through intensive direction-specific repetition causes physiological bias toward that direction, which can be cortically evoked by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). However, because evoked movement has not been used to distinguish movement execution and plan histories to date, it is unclear whether the bias is because of frequently executed movements or recent planning of movement. Here, in a cohort of 40 participants (22 female), we separately manipulate the recent history of movement plans and execution and probe the resulting effects on physiological biases using TMS and on the default plan for goal-directed actions using a timed-response task. Baseline physiological biases shared similar low-level kinematic properties (direction) to a default plan for upcoming movement. However, manipulation of recent execution history via repetitions toward a specific direction significantly affected physiological biases, but not plan-based goal-directed movement. To further determine whether physiological biases reflect ongoing motor planning, we biased plan history by increasing the likelihood of a specific target location and found a significant effect on the default plan for goal-directed movements. However, TMS-evoked movement during preparation did not become biased toward the most frequent plan. This suggests that physiological biases may either provide a readout of the default state of primary motor cortex population activity in the movement-related space, but not ongoing neural activation in the planning-related space, or that practice induces sensitization of neurons involved in the practiced movement, calling into question the relevance of cortically evoked physiological biases to voluntary movements. Human motor performance depends not only on ability to make movements relevant to the environment/body's current state, but also on recent action history. One emerging approach to study recent movement history effects on the brain is via physiological biases in cortically-evoked involuntary movements. However, because prior movement execution and plan histories were indistinguishable to date, to what extent physiological biases are due to pure execution-dependent history, or to prior planning of the most probable action, remains unclear. Here, we show that physiological biases are profoundly affected by recent movement execution history, but not ongoing movement planning. Evoked movement, therefore, provides a readout of the default state within the movement space, but not of ongoing activation related to voluntary movement planning.
人类运动行为涉及动作的规划和执行,有些动作更频繁。通过密集的定向重复来操纵运动的概率分布会导致生理上偏向于那个方向,这可以通过经颅磁刺激(TMS)来诱发。然而,由于迄今为止,诱发运动尚未用于区分运动执行和计划的历史,因此尚不清楚这种偏差是由于经常执行的运动还是最近的运动计划。在这里,我们在 40 名参与者(22 名女性)的队列中,分别操纵运动计划和执行的近期历史,并使用 TMS 探测对生理偏差的影响,以及使用定时反应任务探测对目标导向动作的默认计划的影响。基线生理偏差与即将进行的运动的默认计划具有相似的低级运动学特征(方向)。然而,通过向特定方向进行重复来操纵最近的执行历史会显著影响生理偏差,但不会影响基于计划的目标导向运动。为了进一步确定生理偏差是否反映了正在进行的运动计划,我们通过增加特定目标位置的可能性来偏向计划历史,发现这对目标导向运动的默认计划有显著影响。然而,TMS 诱发的准备过程中的运动并没有偏向最频繁的计划。这表明生理偏差可能反映了运动相关空间中初级运动皮层群体活动的默认状态,但不是规划相关空间中的持续神经激活,或者练习会引起与练习运动相关的神经元的敏化,从而质疑皮质诱发的生理偏差与自愿运动的相关性。人类运动表现不仅取决于与环境/身体当前状态相关的运动能力,还取决于最近的动作历史。一种研究大脑中最近的运动历史效应的新兴方法是通过皮质诱发的无意识运动中的生理偏差。然而,由于迄今为止,先前的运动执行和计划历史是无法区分的,因此生理偏差在多大程度上是由于纯粹的执行依赖性历史,或者是由于最可能的动作的先前计划,仍不清楚。在这里,我们表明生理偏差受到最近的运动执行历史的深刻影响,但不受正在进行的运动规划的影响。因此,诱发运动提供了运动空间内默认状态的读数,但不是与自愿运动规划相关的持续激活读数。