The neural substrate of the ideomotor principle: An event-related fMRI analysis

被引:75
|
作者
Melcher, Tobias [1 ]
Weidema, Maaike [2 ,3 ]
Eenshuistra, Rena M. [2 ,3 ]
Hommel, Bernhard [2 ,3 ]
Gruber, Oliver [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Gottingen, Syst Neurosci Unit, Dept Psychiat & Psychotherapy, D-37075 Gottingen, Germany
[2] Leiden Univ, Inst Psychol Res, NL-2300 RA Leiden, Netherlands
[3] Leiden Inst Brain & Cognit, Leiden, Netherlands
关键词
D O I
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2007.09.049
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
The present fMRI study sought to investigate the neural basis of perceiving learned action effects and thereby to test for hypotheses based on the ideomotor principle. For this purpose, we had subjects undergo a two-phase experimental procedure comprising an acquisition and a test phase, the latter administered inside the MR scanner. During the acquisition phase, free-choice button presses were contingently followed by one of two tones of different pitch which thereby should become "learned action effects". During the following test phase, subjects were presented with the action effects either when in a passive (non-acting) state or when they carried out forced-choice button presses. Conform to our expectations, we found evidence for a motor effector activation following the passive perception of effect tones which elicited activation in the neural motor system (premotor and somatosensory cortices, SMA, and cerebellum). Surprisingly, however, this activation was observed for left-hand effect tones only, suggesting a basic asymmetry in the impact of ideomotor learning. Moreover, we found activation in the posterior prefrontal and temporo-parietal cortex in response to action effects during the pursuit of goal-directed action. This suggests that action effects attracted special attention and thereby engaged selective cognitive control processes to ensure task-appropriate performance. Finally, there was reduced premotor activation for response-compatible as compared to response-incompatible action effects which can be taken as indication for differential requirements on the motor system and thus for behavioral interference and/or facilitation by learned action effects. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1274 / 1288
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The neural substrate of anticipation skill in tennis and soccer: An event-related fMRI study
    Wagg, Chris J.
    Williams, A. Mark
    Vogt, Stefan
    Higuchi, Satomi
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SPORT & EXERCISE PSYCHOLOGY, 2009, 31 : S103 - S103
  • [2] The neural substrate of noun morphological inflection: A rapid event-related fMRI study in Italian
    Russo, Andrea G.
    Esposito, Fabrizio
    Laudanna, Alessandro
    Mancuso, Azzurra
    Di Salle, Francesco
    Elia, Annibale
    De Martino, Maria
    [J]. NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2021, 151
  • [3] Neural mechanisms of planning: A computational analysis using event-related fMRI
    Fincham, JM
    Carter, CS
    van Veen, V
    Stenger, VA
    Anderson, JR
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2002, 99 (05) : 3346 - 3351
  • [4] Event-related fMRI
    Josephs, O
    Turner, R
    Friston, K
    [J]. HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, 1997, 5 (04) : 243 - 248
  • [5] Neural aesthetics of beauty: An event-related fMRI study
    Osaka, Naoyuki
    Ikeda, Takashi
    Rentschler, Ingo
    Osaka, Mariko
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2008, 43 (3-4) : 760 - 760
  • [6] The neural correlates of semantic processing: An event-related fMRI study
    Binder, JR
    McKiernan, KA
    Parsons, MW
    Buchanan, L
    Westbury, CF
    Kaufman, JN
    Possing, ET
    Ward, BD
    [J]. NEUROIMAGE, 2001, 13 (06) : S507 - S507
  • [7] Event-related fMRI in cognition
    Huettel, Scott A.
    [J]. NEUROIMAGE, 2012, 62 (02) : 1152 - 1156
  • [8] Event-related FMRI analysis with maximum correlation modelling
    Duff, E
    Xiong, JH
    Cunnington, R
    Egan, G
    [J]. AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2003, 55 : 16 - 16
  • [9] Feasibility of topological data analysis for event-related fMRI
    Ellis, Cameron T.
    Lesnick, Michael
    Henselman-Petrusek, Gregory
    Keller, Bryn
    Cohen, Jonathan D.
    [J]. NETWORK NEUROSCIENCE, 2019, 3 (03): : 695 - 706
  • [10] Interpretation of event-related fMRI using cluster analysis
    Wichert, A
    Baune, A
    Grothe, J
    Grön, G
    Walter, H
    Sommer, FT
    [J]. ARTIFICIAL NEURAL NETS AND GENETIC ALGORITHMS, 2001, : 446 - 448