4.5 Article

Brain activation profiles during kinesthetic and visual imagery: An fMRI study

Journal

BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 1646, Issue -, Pages 249-261

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2016.06.009

Keywords

Motor imagery; Kinesthetic imagery; Visual imagery; Embodied cognition; fMRI

Categories

Funding

  1. action ARISTEIA II of the Operational Program Education and Lifelong Learning (Action's Beneficiary: General Secretariat for Research and Technology)
  2. European Social Fund
  3. Greek State
  4. Action Supporting Post-doctoral Researchers of the Operational Program Education and Lifelong Learning (Action's Beneficiary: General Secretariat for Research and Technology)
  5. European Social Fund (ESF)
  6. Shainberg Foundation
  7. Neuroscience Institute, Le Bonheur Children's Hospital

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The aim of this study was to identify brain regions involved in motor imagery and differentiate two alternative strategies in its implementation: imagining a motor act using kinesthetic or visual imagery. Fourteen adults were precisely instructed and trained on how to imagine themselves or others perform a movement sequence, with the aim of promoting kinesthetic and visual imagery, respectively, in the context of an fMRI experiment using block design. We found that neither modality of motor imagery elicits activation of the primary motor cortex and that each of the two modalities involves activation of the premotor area which is also activated during action execution and action observation conditions, as well as of the supplementary motor area. Interestingly, the visual and the posterior cingulate cortices show reduced BOLD signal during both imagery conditions. Our results indicate that the networks of regions activated in kinesthetic and visual imagery of motor sequences show a substantial, while not complete overlap, and that the two forms of motor imagery lead to a differential suppression of visual areas. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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