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Influence of working memory on patterns of motor related cortico-cortical coupling
Authors:Deborah?J.?Serrien  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:d.serrien@ion.ucl.ac.uk"   title="  d.serrien@ion.ucl.ac.uk"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,Alek?H.?Pogosyan,Peter?Brown
Affiliation:(1) Sobell Department of Motor Neuroscience and Movement Disorders (Box 146), Institute of Neurology, Queen Square, London, WC1N 3BG, UK
Abstract:Working memory is implicated in various higher-order cognitive operations. We hypothesized that the availability of a temporal representation in working memory would limit the extent of cortico-cortical coupling necessary to undertake a self-paced rhythmic movement. To this end we examined modulations in cortico-cortical interactions as determined by EEG coherence during a delay interval and subsequent movement reproduction. Right hand movement was initially paced by a metronome beat every 0.9 s, followed by a delay interval, after which hand movement was repeated in an unpaced manner. Movement reproduction after a long (22.5 s, corresponding to 25 movement cycles) compared to a short (5.4 s, corresponding to 6 movement cycles) delay interval was associated with an increased degree of functional coupling in the beta frequency band (12–30 Hz) of the left (movement-driving) hemisphere (F3-FC3, F3-C3 and F3-P3 connections) as well as mesial regions (FCz-FC3, FCz-C3 and Cz-FC3 connections) even though overall behavioral characteristics were not influenced. In addition, analysis of the EEG coherence in the delay period revealed a bilateral frontal network (F3-F4, F3-FC4, F4-FC3 and FC3-FC4 connections). Activity in the latter tended to be synchronized in the theta band (4–8 Hz) and was significantly less strong at 22.5 s than 5.4 s. These data suggest that working memory may be partly subserved by synchronization in a bilateral frontal network and may provide an intrinsic contextual influence that shapes the pattern of cortico-cortical interaction during a given task.
Keywords:EEG  Task-related coherence  Functional coupling  Working memory
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