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  4. Motor training strengthens corticospinal suppression during movement preparation
 
research article

Motor training strengthens corticospinal suppression during movement preparation

Vassiliadis, Pierre  
•
Derosiere, Gerard
•
Grandjean, Julien
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December 1, 2020
Journal Of Neurophysiology

Vassiliadis P, Derosiere G, Grandjean J, Duque J. Motor training strengthens corticospinal suppression during movement preparation. J Neurophysiol 124: 1656-1666, 2020. First published September 30, 2020; doi:10.1152/jn.00378.2020.-Training can improve motor skills and modify neural activity at rest and during movement execution. Learning-related modulations may also concern motor preparation but the neural correlates and the potential behavioral relevance of such adjustments remain unclear. In humans, preparatory processes have been largely investigated using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) with several studies reporting decreased corticospinal excitability (CSE) relative to a baseline measure at rest; a phenomenon called preparatory suppression. Here, we investigated the effect of motor training on such preparatory suppression, in relation to resting CSE, in humans. We trained participants to initiate quick movements in an instructed-delay reaction time (RT) task and used TMS to investigate changes in CSE over the practice blocks. Training on the task speeded up RTs, with no repercussion on error rates. Training also increased resting CSE. Most interestingly, we found that CSE during action preparation did not mirror the training-related increase observed at rest. Rather, compared with the rising baseline, the degree of preparatory suppression strengthened with practice. This training-related change in preparatory suppression (but not the changes in baseline CSE) predicted RT gains: the subjects showing a greater strengthening of preparatory suppression were also those exhibiting larger gains in RTs. Finally, such a relationship between RTs and preparatory suppression was also evident at the single-trial level, though only in the nonselected effector: RTs were generally faster in trials where preparatory suppression was deeper. These findings suggest that training induces changes in motor preparatory processes that are linked to an enhanced ability to initiate fast movements.

NEW & NOTEWORTHY Movement preparation involves a broad suppression in the excitability of the corticospinal pathway, a phenomenon called preparatory suppression. Here, we show that motor training strengthens preparatory suppression and that this strengthening is associated with faster reaction times. Our findings highlight a key role of preparatory suppression in training-driven behavioral improvements.

  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
research article
DOI
10.1152/jn.00378.2020
Web of Science ID

WOS:000597372400007

Author(s)
Vassiliadis, Pierre  
Derosiere, Gerard
Grandjean, Julien
Duque, Julie
Date Issued

2020-12-01

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC

Published in
Journal Of Neurophysiology
Volume

124

Issue

6

Start page

1656

End page

1666

Subjects

Neurosciences

•

Physiology

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Neurosciences & Neurology

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action preparation

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corticospinal excitability

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motor training

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reaction time

•

transcranial magnetic stimulation

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selective suppression

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response selection

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directed attention

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reaction-time

•

cortex

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excitability

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inhibition

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mechanisms

•

plasticity

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPHUMMEL  
Available on Infoscience
June 19, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/179011
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