The effects of expectancy on corticospinal excitability: passively preparing to observe a movement

Arias P.; Robles-Garcia, V; Espinosa N.; Corral-Bergantinos, Y; Mordillo-Mateos, L; Grieve, K; Oliviero, A; Cudeiro, J

Keywords: movement preparation, movement observation, TMS, cervicomedullary stimulation, spinal excitability, corticospinal excitability

Abstract

The corticospinal tract excitability is modulated when preparing movements. Earlier to movement execution, the excitability of the spinal cord increases waiting for supraspinal commands to release the movement. Movement execution and movement observation share processes within the motor system, although movement observation research has focused on processes later to movement onset. We used single and paired pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation on M1 ( n = 12), and electrical cervicomedullary stimulation ( n = 7), to understand the modulation of the corticospinal system during the preparation to observe a third person's movement. Subjects passively observed a hand that would remain still or make an index finger extension. The observer's corticospinal excitability rose when expecting to see a movement vs. when expecting to see a still hand. The modulation took origin at a spinal level and not at the corticocortical networks explored. We conclude that expectancy of seeing movements increases the excitability of the spinal cord.

Más información

Título según WOS: The effects of expectancy on corticospinal excitability: passively preparing to observe a movement
Título de la Revista: JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volumen: 111
Número: 7
Editorial: AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
Fecha de publicación: 2014
Página de inicio: 1479
Página final: 1486
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1152/jn.00353.2013

Notas: ISI