4.5 Article

Electro-cortical correlates of motor inhibition: A comparison between selective and non-selective stop tasks

Journal

BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 1284, Issue -, Pages 68-76

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2009.05.058

Keywords

Transition; Switching; Bimanual coordination; Electroencephalography; Inter-hemispheric coherence

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In this study, we compared a selective stop task (transition from a bimanual in-phase to a unimanual index fingers' tapping), with a non-selective stop task (stopping a bimanual in-phase tapping at all), and with a switching task (transition from in-phase to anti-phase bimanual tapping). The aim was twofold: 1) to identify the electro-cortical correlates of selective and non-selective inhibition processes and 2) to investigate which type of inhibition - selective or not - is required when switching between two bimanual motor patterns. The results revealed that all tasks led to enhanced activation (alpha power) of the left sensorimotor and posterior regions which seems to reflect an overall effort to stop the preferred bimanual in-phase tendency. Each task implied specific functional connectivity reorganizations (beta coherence) between cerebral motor areas, probably reflecting engagement in a new unimanual or bimanual movement. (c) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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