Division of Physical Therapy, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia 30322
Division of Physical Therapy, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia 30322.
J Neurosci. 2024 Apr 10;44(15):e1520232024. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1520-23.2024.
Fluctuations in brain activity alter how we perceive our body and generate movements but have not been investigated in functional whole-body behaviors. During reactive balance, we recently showed that evoked brain activity is associated with the balance ability in young individuals. Furthermore, in PD, impaired whole-body motion perception in reactive balance is associated with impaired balance. Here, we investigated the brain activity during the whole-body motion perception in reactive balance in young adults (9 female, 10 male). We hypothesized that both ongoing and evoked cortical activity influences the efficiency of information processing for successful perception and movement during whole-body behaviors. We characterized two cortical signals using electroencephalography localized to the SMA: (1) the "N1," a perturbation-evoked potential that decreases in amplitude with expectancy and is larger in individuals with lower balance function, and (2) preperturbation β power, a transient rhythm that favors maintenance of the current sensorimotor state and is inversely associated with tactile perception. In a two-alternative forced choice task, participants judged whether pairs of backward support surface perturbations during standing were in the "same" or "different" direction. As expected, lower whole-body perception was associated with lower balance ability. Within a perturbation pair, N1 attenuation was larger on correctly perceived trials and associated with better balance, but not perception. In contrast, preperturbation β power was higher on incorrectly perceived trials and associated with poorer perception, but not balance. Together, ongoing and evoked cortical activity have unique roles in information processing that give rise to distinct associations with perceptual and balance ability.
大脑活动的波动会改变我们对身体的感知方式并产生运动,但尚未在功能性全身行为中进行研究。在反应性平衡中,我们最近表明,诱发的大脑活动与年轻个体的平衡能力有关。此外,在 PD 中,反应性平衡中全身运动知觉受损与平衡受损有关。在这里,我们研究了年轻成年人(9 名女性,10 名男性)在反应性平衡中进行全身运动知觉时的大脑活动。我们假设持续和诱发的皮质活动都会影响信息处理的效率,从而成功地感知和运动整个身体行为。我们使用定位到 SMA 的脑电图来描述两个皮质信号:(1)“N1”,这是一种由干扰引起的电位,其幅度随预期而降低,在平衡功能较低的个体中较大,以及(2)预干扰 β 功率,这是一种短暂的节律,有利于维持当前的感觉运动状态,并且与触觉感知呈负相关。在二选一的强制选择任务中,参与者判断站立时向后支撑表面干扰对是否在“相同”或“不同”方向。正如预期的那样,较低的全身感知与较低的平衡能力有关。在干扰对中,正确感知的试验中 N1 的衰减较大,与更好的平衡能力有关,但与感知无关。相比之下,不正确感知的试验中预干扰β功率较高,与较差的感知有关,但与平衡无关。总的来说,持续和诱发的皮质活动在信息处理中具有独特的作用,它们与感知和平衡能力具有不同的关联。