Abstract

Predicting upcoming sensorimotor events means creating forward estimates of the body and the surrounding world. This ability is a fundamental aspect of skilled motor behavior and requires an accurate and constantly updated representation of the body and the environment. To test whether these prediction mechanisms could be affected by a peripheral injury, we employed an action observation and electroencephalogram (EEG) paradigm to assess the occurrence of prediction markers in anticipation of observed sensorimotor events in healthy and brachial plexus injury (BPI) participants. Nine healthy subjects and six BPI patients watched a series of video clips showing an actor's hand and a colored ball in an egocentric perspective. The color of the ball indicated whether the hand would grasp it (hand movement), or the ball would roll toward the hand and touch it (ball movement), or no event would occur (no movement). In healthy participants, we expected to find distinct electroencephalographic activation patterns (EEG signatures) specific to the prediction of the occurrence of each of these situations. Cluster analysis from EEG signals recorded from electrodes placed over the sensorimotor cortex of control participants showed that predicting either an upcoming hand movement or the occurrence of a tactile event yielded specific neural signatures. In BPI participants, the EEG signals from the sensorimotor cortex contralateral to the dominant hand in the hand movement condition were different compared to the other conditions. Furthermore, there were no differences between ball movement and no movement conditions in the sensorimotor cortex contralateral to the dominant hand, suggesting that BPI blurred specifically the ability to predict upcoming tactile events for the dominant hand. These results highlight the role of the sensorimotor cortex in creating estimates of both actions and tactile interactions in the space around the body and suggest plastic effects on prediction coding following peripheral sensorimotor loss.

Highlights

  • Predicting upcoming movements in a variable environment is a fundamental aspect of skilled motor behavior [1,2,3,4,5]

  • The results from the nine controls and the six right-handed brachial plexus injury (BPI) participants are presented as contingency tables (Tables 2 and 3)

  • We investigated the specificity of EEG signatures recorded in anticipation of observing a hand grasping a ball, observing a ball touching a hand, or observing a stationary hand in healthy and in brachial plexus injury (BPI) participants

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Summary

Introduction

Predicting upcoming movements in a variable environment is a fundamental aspect of skilled motor behavior [1,2,3,4,5]. Seminal work showed the existence of bimodal neurons that were both responsive to tactile stimuli applied to a given body part and to the sight of objects moving towards the same body part in the premotor area F4 of macaque monkeys [13, 14] as well as in the posterior parietal cortex [15, 16]. Such neurons form a network devoted to the representation of peripersonal space, defined as the space directly surrounding different parts of the body [17]

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