4.5 Article

M1-P15 as a cortical marker for transcallosal inhibition: A preregistered TMS-EEG study

Journal

FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 16, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2022.937515

Keywords

TEPs; effective connectivity; interhemispheric inhibition; motor system; ipsilateral silent period; bimanual coordination

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health - Ricerca Corrente
  2. Department of Philosophy Piero Martinetti of the University of Milan
  3. Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR)

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This study used transcranial magnetic stimulation and electroencephalography to investigate the cortical index of transcallosal inhibition. The results confirmed the relationship between the M1-P15 amplitude and the ipsilateral silent period, and showed that the M1-P15 amplitude can be modulated by task characteristics.
In a recently published study combining transcranial magnetic stimulation and electroencephalography (TMS-EEG), an early component of TMS-evoked potentials (TEPs), i.e., M1-P15, was proposed as a measure of transcallosal inhibition between motor cortices. Given that early TEPs are known to be highly variable, further evidence is needed before M1-P15 can be considered a reliable index of effective connectivity. Here, we conceived a new preregistered TMS-EEG study with two aims. The first aim was validating the M1-P15 as a cortical index of transcallosal inhibition by replicating previous findings on its relationship with the ipsilateral silent period (iSP) and with performance in bimanual coordination. The second aim was inducing a task-dependent modulation of transcallosal inhibition. A new sample of 32 healthy right-handed participants underwent behavioral motor tasks and TMS-EEG recording, in which left and right M1 were stimulated both during bimanual tasks and during an iSP paradigm. Hypotheses and methods were preregistered before data collection. Results show a replication of our previous findings on the positive relationship between M1-P15 amplitude and the iSP normalized area. Differently, the relationship between M1-P15 latency and bimanual coordination was not confirmed. Finally, M1-P15 amplitude was modulated by the characteristics of the bimanual task the participants were performing, and not by the contralateral hand activity during the iSP paradigm. In sum, the present results corroborate our previous findings in validating the M1-P15 as a cortical marker of transcallosal inhibition and provide novel evidence of its task-dependent modulation. Importantly, we demonstrate the feasibility of preregistration in the TMS-EEG field to increase methodological rigor and transparency.

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