Published 2014
| Version v1
Publication
Training the motor cortex by observing the actions of others during immobilization
Contributors
Description
Limb immobilization and nonuse are well-known causes of corticomotor
depression. While physical training can drive the recovery
from nonuse-dependent corticomotor effects, it remains unclear if it
is possible to gain access to motor cortex in alternative ways, such
as through motor imagery (MI) or action observation (AO). Transcranial
magnetic stimulation was used to study the excitability of the
hand left motor cortex in normal subjects immediately before and
after 10 h of right arm immobilization. During immobilization, subjects
were requested either to imagine to act with their constrained
limb or to observe hand actions performed by other individuals. A
third group of control subjects watched a nature documentary presented
on a computer screen. Hand corticomotor maps and recruitment
curves reliably showed that AO, but not MI, prevented the
corticomotor depression induced by immobilization. Our results demonstrate
the existence of a visuomotor mechanism in humans that
links AO and execution which is able to effect cortical plasticity in a
beneficial way. This facilitation was not related to the action simulation,
because it was not induced by explicit MI.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/811690
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/811690
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE