Published April 10, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Propagating motor cortical patterns of excitability are ubiquitous across human and non-human primate movement initiation

Description

A spatiotemporal pattern of excitability propagates across the primary motor cortex prior to the onset of a reaching movement in non-human primates. If this pattern is a necessary component of voluntary movement initiation, it should be present across a variety of motor tasks, end-effectors, and even species. Here, we show that propagating patterns of excitability occur during the initiation of precision grip force and tongue protrusion in non-human primates, and even isometric wrist extension in a human participant. In all tasks, the directions of propagation across the cortical sheet were bimodally distributed across trials with modes oriented roughly opposite to one another. Propagation speed was unimodally distributed with similar mean speeds across tasks and species. Additionally, propagation direction and speed did not vary systematically with any behavioral measures except response times indicating that this propagating pattern is invariant to kinematic or kinetic details and may be a generic movement initiation signal.

Data availability

Monkey Data: Mendeley Data: https://data.mendeley.com/datasets/3b58rk3jp8/draft?a=da69fe10-5dea-4c8c-8418-acd2901fcdb4

Human Data: DABI: https://dabi.loni.usc.edu/dsi/UH3NS107714/J8DVJ0JZA7DY

Code: https://github.com/nichohat/Propagating-Motor-Cortical-Patterns-of-Excitability-are-Ubiquitous-across-Human-and-non-Human-Primat.git

Files

Propagating-motor-cortical-patterns-of-excitability.pdf

Files (5.0 MB)

Name Size Download all
Graphical abstract
md5:19ee36574a32bd3c76db1c8f78e5b8a2
234.4 kB Preview Download
Supplemental information
md5:18f641f99641c3c918acd4e87986a9b6
441.1 kB Preview Download
Article
md5:d6c434d547f6870816552223bdf6d8bd
4.3 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/j.isci.2023.106518
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5765

Funding

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
R01 NS045853
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
R01 NS111982
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
UH3NS107714

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Computational Neuroscience, Organismal Biology and Anatomy