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Corticospinal excitability during preparation for an anticipatory action is modulated by the availability of visual information
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Corticospinal excitability during preparation for an anticipatory action is modulated by the availability of visual information

Welber Marinovic, Campbell S Reid, Anna M Plooy, Stephan Riek and James R Tresilian
Journal of Neurophysiology, Vol.105(3), pp.1122-1129
2011
PMID: 21123661

Abstract

Motor Cortex - physiology Humans Anticipation, Psychological - physiology Male Reaction Time - physiology Visual Cortex - physiology Action Potentials Young Adult Neuronal Plasticity - physiology Adult Female Decision Making - physiology Motion Perception - physiology Pyramidal Tracts - physiology
To intercept rapidly moving objects, people must predict the right time to initiate their actions. The timing of movement initiation in interceptions is thought to be determined when a perceptual variable specifying time to contact reaches a criterion value. If a response needs to be aborted, the performer must make a decision before this moment. It has been recently shown that the minimal time to suppress an anticipatory action takes longer during motion extrapolation than during continuous visual information. In experiment 1, we sought to determine whether or not the availability of visual information would 1) affect the latency to inhibit an anticipatory action, and 2) modulate the level of excitability in the motor cortex (M1). The behavioral results showed that the absence of visual information prolonged the latency to stop the movement as previously reported. The neurophysiological data indicated that corticospinal excitability levels were affected by the availability of visual information. In experiment 2, we sought to verify whether corticospinal excitability levels would also differ between the two visual conditions when the task did not involve response suppression. The results of experiment 2 indicated that excitability levels did not differ between visual conditions. Overall, our findings indicated that the buildup of motor activation can also play a role in determining different latencies to inhibit an anticipatory action. They also suggest that the buildup of motor activation in the corticospinal pathways can be strategically modulated to the requirements of the task during continuous visual information.

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