4.6 Article

Proprioception-based movement goals support imitation and are disrupted in apraxia

Journal

CORTEX
Volume 147, Issue -, Pages 140-156

Publisher

ELSEVIER MASSON, CORP OFF
DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2021.11.010

Keywords

Imitation; Proprioception; Motor goal; Stroke; Apraxia

Funding

  1. Albert Einstein Society of the Einstein Healthcare Network [AES 19-02]
  2. NIH [R01 NS115862]
  3. [R01 NS099061]

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Imitating observed actions is an efficient method for learning novel movements. This study investigated the role of proprioception in imitation and found that representing movement goals proprioceptively is crucial for successful imitation. Patients with apraxia, a neurological disorder commonly seen after left hemisphere stroke, showed deficits in representing and accessing proprioceptive goals, which contributed to their imitation impairments.
The ability to imitate observed actions serves as an efficient method for learning novel movements and is specifically impaired (without concomitant gross motor impairments) in the neurological disorder of limb apraxia, a disorder common after left hemisphere stroke. Research with apraxic patients has advanced our understanding of how people imitate. However, the role of proprioception in imitation has been rarely assessed directly. Prior work has proposed that proprioceptively sensed body position is transformed into a visual format, supporting the attainment of a desired imitation goal represented visually (i.e., how the movement should look when performed). In contrast, we hypothesized a more direct role for proprioception: we suggest that movement goals are also represented proprioceptively (i.e., how a desired movement should feel when performed), and the ability to represent or access such proprioceptive goals is deficient in apraxia. Using a novel imitation task in which a robot cued meaningless trajectories proprioceptively or visually, we probed the role of each sensory modality. We found that patients with left hemisphere stroke were disproportionately worse than controls at imitating when cued proprioceptively versus visually. This proprioceptive versus visual disparity was associated with apraxia severity as assessed by a traditional imitation task, but could not be explained by general proprioceptive impairment or speed-accuracy trade-offs. These data suggest that successful imitation depends in part on the ability to represent movement goals in terms of how those movements should feel, and that deficits in this ability contribute to imitation impairments in patients with apraxia.(c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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