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Resumo(s)
The neural mechanisms behind human voluntary motion are not fully characterized
yet, in spite of numerous research studies. Slow ( 0.1 Hz) brain oscillations are known to have a powerful modulatory effect on several cognitive and physiological phenomena, including free movement.
This study is based on fMRI data acquired from 25 young, healthy subjects. The tasks
were: rest, self-paced motion, motion paced by a periodic 0.1 Hz stimulus. The temporal
resolution was finer than standard fMRI protocols (TR=871 ms). After preprocessing, the signal from brain regions of interest was extracted, and functional connectivity was computed between brain regions using wavelet phase coherence. Complementarily, effective connectivity was measured using Granger causality. The final output was Phase-Locking (PL) and Granger Causality (GC) matrices reflecting inter-regional phase coherence and causal interactions, respectively, around 0.1 Hz.
Using the GraphVar toolbox, inter-task and inter-group comparisons were performed.
In inter-task comparisons PL matrices showed encouraging results unlike GC matrices.
Pairs of regions for which PL differs significantly between rest and self-paced movement were identified. These include mainly the Postcentral gyrus, Putamen, the Anterior Cingulum, the Precentral gyrus, the Calcarine, the Lingual and the Insula (all in the left hemisphere). Topological changes in the brain wiring were identified across the tasks by computing the node degree and global efficiency. Inter-group comparisons took into account the inter movement interval and the coupling between BOLD and heart rate beatto-beat interval signals and showed changes in brain activity depending on the regularity of movement intervals and specific connectivity patterns for neural BOLD oscillations, respectively.
This methodological approach allowed to make a contribution towards the characterization of the functional connectivity of brain circuits related to voluntary motor behavior.
Descrição
Palavras-chave
Voluntary movement Slow oscillations BOLD fMRI Wavelet coherence Granger causality Brain networks
