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Self-modulation of primary motor cortex activity with motor and motor imagery tasks using real-time fMRI-based neurofeedback
Authors:Berman Brian D  Horovitz Silvina G  Venkataraman Gaurav  Hallett Mark
Affiliation:
  • a Department of Neurology, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, CO, USA
  • b Human Motor Control Section, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA
  • c Reed College, Portland, OR, USA
  • Abstract:
    Advances in fMRI data acquisition and processing have made it possible to analyze brain activity as rapidly as the images are acquired allowing this information to be fed back to subjects in the scanner. The ability of subjects to learn to volitionally control localized brain activity within motor cortex using such real-time fMRI-based neurofeedback (NF) is actively being investigated as it may have clinical implications for motor rehabilitation after central nervous system injury and brain-computer interfaces. We investigated the ability of fifteen healthy volunteers to use NF to modulate brain activity within the primary motor cortex (M1) during a finger tapping and tapping imagery task. The M1 hand area ROI (ROIm) was functionally localized during finger tapping and a visual representation of BOLD signal changes within the ROIm fed back to the subject in the scanner. Surface EMG was used to assess motor output during tapping and ensure no motor activity was present during motor imagery task. Subjects quickly learned to modulate brain activity within their ROIm during the finger-tapping task, which could be dissociated from the magnitude of the tapping, but did not show a significant increase within the ROIm during the hand motor imagery task at the group level despite strongly activating a network consistent with the performance of motor imagery. The inability of subjects to modulate M1 proper with motor imagery may reflect an inherent difficulty in activating synapses in this area, with or without NF, since such activation may lead to M1 neuronal output and obligatory muscle activity. Future real-time fMRI-based NF investigations involving motor cortex may benefit from focusing attention on cortical regions other than M1 for feedback training or alternative feedback strategies such as measures of functional connectivity within the motor system.
    Keywords:ACC, anterior cingulate cortex   AFNI, Analysis of Functional NeuroImages   BOLD, blood-oxygen level dependent   BCI, brain-computer interface   DLPFC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex   EMG, electromyography   fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging   GLM, general linear model   IFG, inferior frontal gyrus   IPL, inferior parietal lobe   IPS, intraparietal sulcus   M1, primary motor cortex   MeFG, medial frontal gyrus   MFG, middle frontal gyrus   MOG, middle occipital gyrus   NF, neurofeedback   real-time fMRI, rtfMRI   ROI, region of interest   SMA, supplementary motor area   SFG, superior frontal gyrus   SPL, superior parietal lobe
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