Abstract

What is the role of ipsilateral motor and premotor areas in motor learning? One view is that ipsilateral activity suppresses contralateral motor cortex and, accordingly, that inhibiting ipsilateral regions can improve motor learning. Alternatively, the ipsilateral motor cortex may play an active role in the control and/or learning of unilateral hand movements. We approached this question by applying double-blind bihemispheric transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) over both contralateral and ipsilateral motor cortex in a between-group design during 4 d of unimanual explicit sequence training in human participants. Independently of whether the anode was placed over contralateral or ipsilateral motor cortex, bihemispheric stimulation yielded substantial performance gains relative to unihemispheric or sham stimulation. This performance advantage appeared to be supported by plastic changes in both hemispheres. First, we found that behavioral advantages generalized strongly to the untrained hand, suggesting that tDCS strengthened effector-independent representations. Second, functional imaging during speed-matched execution of trained sequences conducted 48 h after training revealed sustained, polarity-independent increases in activity in both motor cortices relative to the sham group. These results suggest a cooperative rather than competitive interaction of the two motor cortices during skill learning and suggest that bihemispheric brain stimulation during unimanual skill learning may be beneficial because it harnesses plasticity in the ipsilateral hemisphere.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Many neurorehabilitation approaches are based on the idea that is beneficial to boost excitability in the contralateral hemisphere while attenuating that of the ipsilateral cortex to reduce interhemispheric inhibition. We observed that bihemispheric transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) with the excitatory anode either over contralateral or ipsilateral motor cortex facilitated motor learning nearly twice as strongly as unihemispheric tDCS. These increases in motor learning were accompanied by increases in fMRI activation in both motor cortices that outlasted the stimulation period, as well as increased generalization to the untrained hand. Collectively, our findings suggest a cooperative rather than a competitive role of the hemispheres and imply that it is most beneficial to harness plasticity in both hemispheres in neurorehabilitation of motor deficits.

Highlights

  • Even strictly unilateral motor behaviors such as moving one hand rely on interactions between the cerebral hemispheres

  • It has been suggested that motor learning may be facilitated, by exciting contralateral motor cortex, and by inhibiting ipsilateral cortex, in the context of stroke rehabilitation (Murase et al, 2004; Hummel and Cohen, 2006; Williams et al, 2010; Takeuchi et al, 2012). transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) has been shown to increase motor-evoked potentials (MEPs) when the anode is placed above primary motor cortex (M1) (Nitsche and Paulus, 2000) and to decrease MEPs in the presence of a cathode (Nitsche et al, 2003)

  • Bihemispheric tDCS increases motor learning more than unihemispheric tDCS We first determined whether conventional bihemispheric tDCS is more effective in promoting learning than unihemispheric stimulation

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Summary

Introduction

Even strictly unilateral motor behaviors such as moving one hand rely on interactions between the cerebral hemispheres. One influential idea is the ā€œinterhemispheric competitionā€ model, according to which the two hemispheres mutually suppress each other via inhibitory interconnections (Curtis, 1940; Ferbert et al, 1992; Daskalakis et al, 2002; Chen, 2004; Ni et al, 2009). This notion has shaped theories about how best to improve motor learning through brain stimulation. Consistent with the interhemispheric competition model, Vines et al (2008) demonstrated that bihemi-

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