Prior cortical activity differences during an action observation plus motor imagery task related to motor adaptation performance of a coordinated multi-limb complex task

被引:0
|
作者
J. Ignacio Serrano
Daniel Muñoz-García
Raúl Ferrer-Peña
Victor D’eudeville
Marta Brero
Maxime Boisson
M. Dolores del Castillo
机构
[1] Centro de Automática y Robótica (CAR) CSIC-UPM,Neural and Cognitive Engineering Group (gNeC)
[2] Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (UAM),Departamento de Fisioterapia and Motion in Brains Research Group, Instituto de Neurociencias y Ciencias del Movimiento, Centro Superior de Estudios Universitarios La Salle
来源
Cognitive Neurodynamics | 2020年 / 14卷
关键词
Motor adaptation; EEG brain activity; Action observation; Virtual reality; Reverse steering bicycle;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Motor adaptation is the ability to develop new motor skills that makes performing a consolidated motor task under different psychophysical conditions possible. There exists a proven relationship between prior brain activity at rest and motor adaptation. However, the brain activity at rest is highly variable both between and within subjects. Here we hypothesize that the cortical activity during the original task to be later adapted is a more reliable and stronger determinant of motor adaptation. Consequently, we present a study to find cortical areas whose activity, both at rest and during first-person virtual reality simulation of bicycle riding, characterizes the subjects who did and did not adapt to ride a reverse steering bicycle, a complex motor adaptation task involving all limbs and balance. The results showed that cortical activity differences during the simulated task were higher, more significant, spatially larger, and spectrally wider than at rest for good performers. In this sense, the activity of the left anterior insula, left dorsolateral and ventrolateral inferior prefrontal areas, and left inferior premotor cortex (action understanding hub of the mirror neuron circuit) during simulated bicycle riding are the areas with the most descriptive power for the ability of adapting the motor task.
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页码:769 / 779
页数:10
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