Artículo
The relative influence of goal and kinematics on corticospinal excitability depends on the information provided to the observer
Mc Cabe, Sofia Ines
; Villalta, Jorge Ignacio
; Saunier, Ghislain; Grafton, Scott T.; Della Maggiore, Valeria Monica
Fecha de publicación:
08/2015
Editorial:
Oxford Univ Press Inc
Revista:
Cerebral Cortex
ISSN:
1047-3211
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
Viewing a person perform an action activates the observer's motor system. Whether this phenomenon reflects the action's kinematics or its final goal remains a matter of debate. One alternative to this apparent controversy is that the relative influence of goal and kinematics depends on the information available to the observer. Here, we addressed this possibility. For this purpose, we measured corticospinal excitability (CSE) while subjects viewed 3 different grasping actions with 2 goals: a large and a small object. Actions were directed to the large object, the small object, or corrected online in which case the goal switched during the movement. We first determined the kinematics and dynamics of the 3 actions during execution. This information was used in 2 other experiments to measure CSE while observers viewed videos of the same actions. CSE was recorded prior to movement onset and at 3 time points during the observed action. To discern between goal and kinematics, information about the goal was manipulated across experiments. We found that the goal influenced CSE only when its identity was known before movement onset. In contrast, a kinematic modulation of CSE was observed whether or not information regarding the goal was provided.
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Articulos(IFIBIO HOUSSAY)
Articulos de INSTITUTO DE FISIOLOGIA Y BIOFISICA BERNARDO HOUSSAY
Articulos de INSTITUTO DE FISIOLOGIA Y BIOFISICA BERNARDO HOUSSAY
Citación
Mc Cabe, Sofia Ines; Villalta, Jorge Ignacio; Saunier, Ghislain; Grafton, Scott T.; Della Maggiore, Valeria Monica; The relative influence of goal and kinematics on corticospinal excitability depends on the information provided to the observer; Oxford Univ Press Inc; Cerebral Cortex; 25; 8; 8-2015; 2229-2237
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