4.4 Article

Differential changes in somatosensory evoked potentials and motor performance: pursuit movement task versus force matching tracking task

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 128, Issue 6, Pages 1453-1465

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00308.2022

Keywords

cerebellum; force matching; motor learning; sensorimotor integration; somatosensory evoked potentials

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery Grant program [RGPIN-2022-04777]
  2. Canada Graduate Scholarship (CGS-M) [705013]
  3. Ontario Tech University

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Force modulation relies on accurate proprioception, and force-matching tasks alter corticocerebellar connectivity. This study compared the changes in neural responses and motor performance following force-matching tracking task and motor tracing task.
Force modulation relies on accurate proprioception, and force-matching tasks alter corticocerebellar connectivity. Corticocerebellar (N24) and corticomotor pathways are impacted following the acquisition of a motor tracing task (MTT), measured using both somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) and transcranial magnetic stimulation. This study compared changes in early SEP peak amplitudes and motor performance following a force-matching tracking task (FMTT) to an MTT. Thirty (18 females) right-handed participants, aged 21.4 +/- 2.76, were electrically stimulated over the right-median nerve at 2.47 Hz and 4.98 Hz (averaged 1,000 sweeps/rate) to elicit SEPs, recorded via a 64-channel electroencephalography cap, before, and after task acquisition using the right abductor pollicis brevis muscle. Retention was measured 24 h later. Significant time-by-group interactions occurred for the N20 SEP: 6.3% decrease postFMTT versus 5.5% increase post-MTT (P = 0.013); P25 SEP: 4.0% decrease post-FMTT versus 10.3% increase post-MTT (P = 0.006); and N18 SEP: 113.4% increase post-FMTT versus 4.4% decrease post-MTT (P = 0.006). N18 and N30 showed significant effect of time (both P < 0.001). Motor performance: significant time-by-group interactions-postacquisition: FMTT improved 15.3% versus 24.3% for MTT (P = 0.025), retention: FMTT improved 17.4% and MTT by 30.1% (P = 0.004). Task-dependent differences occurred in SEP peaks associated with cortical somatosensory processing (N20 and P25), and cerebellar input (N18), with similar changes in sensorimotor integration (N30), with differential improvements in motor performance, indicating important differences in cerebellar and sensory processing for tasks reliant on proprioception.

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