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Response preparation involves a release of intracortical inhibition in task-irrelevant muscles

Response preparation involves a release of intracortical inhibition in task-irrelevant muscles

来源:bioRxiv_logobioRxiv
英文摘要

Abstract Action preparation involves widespread modulation of motor system excitability, but the precise mechanisms are unknown. In this study, we investigated whether intracortical inhibition changes in task-irrelevant muscle representations during action preparation. We used transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) combined with electromyography in healthy human adults to measure motor evoked potentials (MEPs) and cortical silent periods (CSPs) in task-irrelevant muscles during the preparatory period of simple delayed response tasks. In Experiment 1, participants responded with the left-index finger in one task condition and the right-index finger in another task condition, while MEPs and CSPs were measured from the contralateral non-responding and tonically contracted index finger. During Experiment 2, participants responded with the right pinky finger while MEPs and CSPs were measured from the tonically contracted left-index finger. In both experiments, MEPs and CSPs were compared between the task preparatory period and a resting intertrial baseline. The CSP duration during response preparation decreased from baseline in every case. A laterality difference was also observed in Experiment 1, with a greater CSP reduction during the preparation of left finger responses compared to right finger responses. MEP amplitudes showed no modulation during movement preparation in any of the three response conditions. These findings indicate cortical inhibition associated with task-irrelevant muscles is transiently released during action preparation and implicate a novel mechanism for the controlled and coordinated release of motor cortex inhibition. New & NoteworthyIn this study we observed the first evidence of a release of intracortical inhibition in task-irrelevant muscle representations during response preparation. We applied transcranial magnetic stimulation to elicit cortical silent periods in task-irrelevant muscles during response preparation and observed a consistent decrease in the silent period duration relative to a resting baseline. These findings address the question of whether cortical mechanisms underlie widespread modulation in motor excitability during response preparation.

Gomez Isaac N.、Ormiston Kara、Greenhouse Ian

Department of Human Physiology, University of OregonDepartment of Human Physiology, University of OregonDepartment of Human Physiology, University of Oregon

10.1101/2020.06.23.167965

神经病学、精神病学基础医学生理学

Gomez Isaac N.,Ormiston Kara,Greenhouse Ian.Response preparation involves a release of intracortical inhibition in task-irrelevant muscles[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-28].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.06.23.167965.点此复制

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