4.3 Article

Transcranial magnetic stimulation on the dorsal premotor cortex facilitates human visuomotor adaptation

Journal

NEUROREPORT
Volume 33, Issue 16, Pages 723-727

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/WNR.0000000000001838

Keywords

adaptation; learning; premotor cortex; transcranial magnetic stimulation; visuomotor

Categories

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science KAKENHI [19H04977, 19H05729, 22H00498]
  2. JSPS Research Fellowship for Young Scientists (JSPS KAKENHI) [19J20366]

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This study investigates the noninvasive modulation of motor adaptation in humans. The results show that transcranial magnetic stimulation can increase adaptation and the direction of modulation is specific to the targeted area. Additionally, the study demonstrates the feasibility of using PMd as a target region for neuromodulation to understand human motor adaptation and improve motor rehabilitation.
The premotor cortex is traditionally known to be involved in motor preparation and execution. More recently, evidence from neuroscience research shows that the dorsal premotor cortex (PMd) is also involved in sensory error-based motor adaptation and that invasive brain stimulation on PMd can attenuate adaptation in monkeys. The present study examines if adaptation can be modulated noninvasively in humans. Twenty-five healthy volunteers participated in a motor task in which rapid arm-reaching movements were made to hit a target, whereas the online cursor feedback about the hand position was visually rotated, inducing sensory error that drove motor adaptation. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) was delivered to PMd just before experiencing a sensory error, as in the previous study on monkeys. The degree of motor adaptation was measured as the change in the hand direction in response to the experienced error. TMS was found to increase adaptation compared with control conditions. Interestingly, the direction of modulation was opposite to the previous study on monkeys, which might originate from different methods and parameters of stimulation. The effect was also location-specific and was not a mere artifact of applying TMS because the facilitatory modulation occurred when stimulating PMd but not when stimulating the ventral premotor cortex, which was known for different roles and networks from PMd. Since noninvasive neuromodulation is a promising tool for research and clinical practice, the present study demonstrates that PMd is a feasible target region of neuromodulation to understand human motor adaptation and improve motor rehabilitation.

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