2,380 research outputs found

    L’influence de l'anticipation sur les modulations de puissance dans la bande de frĂ©quence bĂȘta durant la prĂ©paration du mouvement et L'effet de la variance dans les rĂ©troactions sensorielles sur la rĂ©tention Ă  court terme

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    La production du mouvement est un aspect primordial de la vie qui permet aux organismes vivants d'interagir avec l'environnement. En ce sens, pour ĂȘtre efficaces, tous les mouvements doivent ĂȘtre planifiĂ©s et mis Ă  jour en fonction de la complexitĂ© et de la variabilitĂ© de l'environnement. Des chercheurs du domaine du contrĂŽle moteur ont Ă©tudiĂ© de maniĂšre approfondie les processus de planification et d’adaptation motrice. Puisque les processus de planification et d'adaptation motrice sont influencĂ©s par la variabilitĂ© de l'environnement, le prĂ©sent mĂ©moire cherche Ă  fournir une comprĂ©hension plus profonde de ces deux processus moteurs Ă  cet Ă©gard. La premiĂšre contribution scientifique prĂ©sentĂ©e ici tire parti du fait que les temps de rĂ©action (TR) sont rĂ©duits lorsqu'il est possible d'anticiper l’objectif moteur, afin de dĂ©terminer si les modulations de TR associĂ©es Ă  l'anticipation spatiale et temporelle sont sous-tendues par une activitĂ© prĂ©paratoire similaire. Cela a Ă©tĂ© fait en utilisant l'Ă©lectroencĂ©phalographie (EEG) de surface pour analyser l'activitĂ© oscillatoire dans la bande de frĂ©quence bĂȘta (13 - 30 Hz) au cours de la pĂ©riode de planification du mouvement. Les rĂ©sultats ont rĂ©vĂ©lĂ© que l'anticipation temporelle Ă©tait associĂ©e Ă  la dĂ©synchronisation de la bande bĂȘta au-dessus des rĂ©gions sensorimotrices controlatĂ©rales Ă  la main effectrice, en particulier autour du moment prĂ©vu de l'apparition de la cible. L’ampleur de ces modulations Ă©tait corrĂ©lĂ©e aux modulations de TR Ă  travers les participants. En revanche, l'anticipation spatiale a augmentĂ© de maniĂšre sĂ©lective la puissance de la bande bĂȘta au-dessus des rĂ©gions pariĂ©to-occipitales bilatĂ©rales pendant toute la pĂ©riode de planification. Ces rĂ©sultats suggĂšrent des Ă©tats de prĂ©paration distinct en fonction de l’anticipation temporelle et spatiale. D’un autre cĂŽtĂ©, le deuxiĂšme projet traite de la façon dont la variabilitĂ© de la rĂ©troaction sensorielle interfĂšre avec la rĂ©tention Ă  court terme dans l’étude de l’adaptation motrice. Plus prĂ©cisĂ©ment, une tĂąche d'adaptation visuomotrice a Ă©tĂ© utilisĂ©e au cours de laquelle la variance des rotations a Ă©tĂ© manipulĂ©e de maniĂšre paramĂ©trique Ă  travers trois groupes, et ce, tout au long de la pĂ©riode d’acquisition. Par la suite, la rĂ©tention de cette nouvelle relation visuomotrice a Ă©tĂ© Ă©valuĂ©e. Les rĂ©sultats ont rĂ©vĂ©lĂ© que, mĂȘme si le processus d'adaptation Ă©tait robuste Ă  la manipulation de la variance, la rĂ©tention Ă  court terme Ă©tait altĂ©rĂ©e par des plus hauts niveaux de variance. Finalement, la discussion a d'abord cherchĂ© Ă  intĂ©grer ces deux contributions en revisitant l'interprĂ©tation des rĂ©sultats sous un angle centrĂ© sur l'incertitude et en fournissant un aperçu des potentielles reprĂ©sentations internes de l'incertitude susceptibles de sous-tendre les rĂ©sultats expĂ©rimentaux observĂ©s. Par la suite, une partie de la discussion a Ă©tĂ© rĂ©servĂ©e Ă  la maniĂšre dont le champ du contrĂŽle moteur migre de plus en plus vers l’utilisation de tĂąches et d’approches expĂ©rimentales plus complexes, mais Ă©cologiques aux dĂ©pends des tĂąches simples, mais quelque peu dĂ©naturĂ©es que l’on retrouve dans les laboratoires du domaine. La discussion a Ă©tĂ© couronnĂ©e par une brĂšve proposition allant dans ce sens.Abstract: Motor behavior is a paramount aspect of life that enables the living to interact with the environment through the production of movement. In order to be efficient, movements need to be planned and updated according to the complexity and the ever-changing nature of the environment. Motor control experts have extensively investigated the planning and adaptation processes. Since both motor planning and motor adaptation processes are influenced by variability in the environment, the present thesis seeks to provide a deeper understanding of both these motor processes in this regard. More specifically, the first scientific contribution presented herein leverages the fact that reaction times (RTs) are reduced when the anticipation of the motor goal is possible to elucidate whether the RT modulations associated with temporal and spatial anticipation are subtended by similar preparatory activity. This was done by using scalp electroencephalography (EEG) to analyze the oscillatory activity in the beta frequency band (13 – 30 Hz) during the planning period. Results revealed that temporal anticipation was associated with beta-band desynchronization over contralateral sensorimotor regions, specifically around the expected moment of target onset, the magnitude of which was correlated with RT modulations across participants. In contrast, spatial anticipation selectively increased beta-band power over bilateral parieto-occipital regions during the entire planning period, suggesting that distinct states of preparation are incurred by temporal and spatial anticipation. Additionally, the second project addressed how variance in the sensory feedback interferes with short-term retention of motor adaptation. Specifically, a visuomotor adaptation task was used during which the variance of exposed rotation was parametrically manipulated across three groups, and retention of the adapted visuomotor relationship was assessed. Results revealed that, although the adaptation process was robust to the manipulation of variance, the short-term retention was impaired. The discussion first sought to integrate these two projects by revisiting the interpretation of both projects under the scope of uncertainty and by providing an overview of the internal representation of uncertainty that might subtend the experimental results. Subsequently, a part of the discussion was reserved to allude how the motor control field is transitioning from laboratory-based tasks to more naturalistic paradigms by using approaches to move motor control research toward real-world conditions. The discussion culminates with a brief scientific proposal along those lines

    Assessing the oscillatory properties of functional connections between sensory areas during crossmodal illusions: A correlational and causal investigation.

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    A comprehensive investigation on multisensory integration is presented whereby three complex studies investigating the role of neuro-oscillatory processes in tactile-visual and auditory-visual illusory tasks were conducted. Utilising EEG scanning we first replicated previous evidence of a correlation between individual alpha frequency and the auditory-induced Double Flash Illusion (DFI). We also provided evidence of a previously unreported correlation between individual beta frequency and the corresponding tactile-induced DFI. In two follow-up studies evidence is also provided of a causal relationship between beta processes and the tactile-induced DFI using a variant of paired associative TMS known as cortico-cortical Paired Associative Stimulation. Here we demonstrated by temporarily reducing occipital beta speed we can subsequently produce reliably predictable changes in the temporal profile of visuo-tactile multisensory processing. Using two control measures across two investigations we provided evidence suggesting that the stimulation that we utilised was both frequency specific and hemisphere specific. From this we concluded that multisensory processes are facilitated by the oscillatory properties of network-specific (auditory-to-visual or somatosensory-to-visual) neural connections favouring optimal, directional neural communication and integration between the senses

    The cognitive neuroscience of visual working memory

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    Visual working memory allows us to temporarily maintain and manipulate visual information in order to solve a task. The study of the brain mechanisms underlying this function began more than half a century ago, with Scoville and Milner’s (1957) seminal discoveries with amnesic patients. This timely collection of papers brings together diverse perspectives on the cognitive neuroscience of visual working memory from multiple fields that have traditionally been fairly disjointed: human neuroimaging, electrophysiological, behavioural and animal lesion studies, investigating both the developing and the adult brain

    A Dynamical Systems Approach to Characterizing Brain–Body Interactions during Movement: Challenges, Interpretations, and Recommendations

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    Brain–body interactions (BBIs) have been the focus of intense scrutiny since the inception of the scientific method, playing a foundational role in the earliest debates over the philosophy of science. Contemporary investigations of BBIs to elucidate the neural principles of motor control have benefited from advances in neuroimaging, device engineering, and signal processing. However, these studies generally suffer from two major limitations. First, they rely on interpretations of ‘brain’ activity that are behavioral in nature, rather than neuroanatomical or biophysical. Second, they employ methodological approaches that are inconsistent with a dynamical systems approach to neuromotor control. These limitations represent a fundamental challenge to the use of BBIs for answering basic and applied research questions in neuroimaging and neurorehabilitation. Thus, this review is written as a tutorial to address both limitations for those interested in studying BBIs through a dynamical systems lens. First, we outline current best practices for acquiring, interpreting, and cleaning scalp-measured electroencephalography (EEG) acquired during whole-body movement. Second, we discuss historical and current theories for modeling EEG and kinematic data as dynamical systems. Third, we provide worked examples from both canonical model systems and from empirical EEG and kinematic data collected from two subjects during an overground walking task

    Dynamic Oscillatory Interactions Between Neural Attention and Sensorimotor Systems

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    The adaptive and flexible ability of the human brain to preference the processing of salient environmental features in the visual space is essential to normative cognitive function, and various neurologically afflicted patient groups report negative impacts on visual attention. While the brain-bases of human attentional processing have begun to be unraveled, very little is known regarding the interactions between attention systems and systems supporting sensory and motor processing. This is essential, as these interactions are dynamic; evolving rapidly in time and across a wide range of functionally defined rhythmic frequencies. Using magnetoencephalography (MEG) and a range of novel cognitive paradigms and analytical techniques, this work attempts to fill critical gaps in this knowledge. Specifically, we unravel the role of dynamic oscillatory interactions between attention and three sensorimotor systems. First, we establish the importance of sub-second occipital alpha (8 – 14 Hz) oscillatory responses in visual distractor suppression during selective attention (Chapter 1) and their essential role in fronto-parietal attention networks during visual orienting (Chapter 2). Next, we examine the divergent effects of directed attention on multi-frequency primary somatosensory neural oscillations in the theta (4 – 8 Hz), alpha, and beta (18 – 26 Hz) bands (Chapter 3). Finally, we extend these findings to the motor system (Chapter 4), and find that the frontal and parietal beta-frequency oscillations known to support motor planning and execution are modulated equivalently by differing subtypes of attentional interference, whereas frontal gamma (64 – 84 Hz) oscillations specifically index the superadditive effect of this interference. These findings provide new insight into the dynamic nature of attention-sensorimotor interactions in the human brain, and will be the foundation for groundbreaking new studies of attentional deficits in patients with common neurological disorders (e.g., Alzheimer’s disease, HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders, Parkinson’s disease). With an enhanced knowledge of the temporal and spectral definitions of these impairments, new therapeutic interventions utilizing frequency-targeted neural stimulation can be developed

    Atypical coordination of cortical oscillations in response to speech in autism.

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    Subjects with autism often show language difficulties, but it is unclear how they relate to neurophysiological anomalies of cortical speech processing. We used combined EEG and fMRI in 13 subjects with autism and 13 control participants and show that in autism, gamma and theta cortical activity do not engage synergistically in response to speech. Theta activity in left auditory cortex fails to track speech modulations, and to down-regulate gamma oscillations in the group with autism. This deficit predicts the severity of both verbal impairment and autism symptoms in the affected sample. Finally, we found that oscillation-based connectivity between auditory and other language cortices is altered in autism. These results suggest that the verbal disorder in autism could be associated with an altered balance of slow and fast auditory oscillations, and that this anomaly could compromise the mapping between sensory input and higher-level cognitive representations
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