Publications by authors named "Jean Pailhous"

Voluntary movement is often perturbed by the external forces in the environment. Because corticospinal (CS) control of wrist muscles during preparation of voluntary movement has been extensively studied without variation in the external forces, very little is known about the way CS control adapts when subjects expect motor perturbations. Here, we studied the CS control of wrist muscles during expectation of an imposed wrist extension.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We investigated which brain areas show error-related activity during online motor control while errors occur independently from decision making. During motor tasks, error is a deviation from accuracy or correctness. The effect of the accuracy level on error-related brain activity is unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although preparation of voluntary movement has been extensively studied, very few human neuroimaging studies have examined preparation of an intentional reaction to a motor perturbation. This latter type of preparation is fundamental for adaptive motor capabilities in everyday life because it allows a desired motor output to be maintained despite changes in external forces. Using fMRI, we studied how the sensorimotor cortical network is implicated in preparing to react to a mechanical motor perturbation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Human subjects have been found to be able to cognitively prepare themselves to resist to a TMS-induced central perturbation by selectively modulating the corticospinal excitability (CS). The aim of this study was to investigate the on-line adaptability of this cognitive tuning of CS excitability during human gait. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) was used both as a central perturbation evoking a movement and as a tool for quantifying the CS excitability before the movement was evoked.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the present functional magnetic resonance imaging experiment, study participants performed a dynamic tracking task in a precision grip configuration. The precision level of the force control was varied while the mean force level of 5 N was kept constant. Contrasts cancelling error rate differences between the conditions showed activation of nonprimary motor areas and other frontal structures in response to increasing precision constraints when the precision of force control could still be increased, and of right primary and associative parietal areas when the precision of the produced force control reached its maximum.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The many signs of cognitive processes in the activation pattern of the primary motor cortex or in corticospinal (CS) excitability gave rise to the idea that the motor cortex is a crucial node in the processing of cognitive information related to sensorimotor functions. Moreover, it became clear that the preparatory motor sets offer a privileged window to investigate the interaction between cognitive and sensorimotor function in the motor cortex. In the present review, we examine how the study of the preparatory motor sets anticipating a mechanical movement perturbation contributes to enlightening this question.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of this study was to investigate how the cognitive tuning of corticospinal (CS) excitability adapts to the type of evoked-movement (Flexion vs. Extension) during human gait. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) was used both as a central perturbation evoking a movement and as a tool for quantifying the CS excitability of the muscles under study (RF/BF).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In 3 experiments, the authors studied the organization of spatiotemporal information in memory. Stimuli consisted of configurations of dots, presented sequentially. The stimuli were either proportional, with interdot distances corresponding to interdot durations, or not proportional, with interdol distances not corresponding to interdot durations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Awareness of the muscular forces we produce during voluntary movement must be distinguished from awareness of motor outcome itself. Indeed, there is no univocal relationship between produced muscle force and movement outcome because of external forces. In the present study, we performed a functional magnetic resonance imaging study to investigate the neural bases underlying the awareness we can have of the muscular forces we put into our voluntary movements.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

During voluntary motor actions, the cortico-spinal (CS) excitability is known to be modulated, on the one hand by cognitive (intention-related) processes and, on the other hand, by motor (performance-related) processes. Here, we studied the way these processes interact in the tuning of CS excitability during voluntary wrist movement. We used transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) both as a reliable tool for quantifying the CS excitability, through the motor-evoked potentials (MEPs), and as a central perturbation evoking a movement (because the stimulation intensity was above threshold) with subjects instructed to prepare (without changing their muscle activation) either to "let go" or to "resist" to this evoked movement.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of this study was to determine the relative involvement of the corticospinal (CS) pathway in voluntarily controlled walking compared to unconstrained walking. In the voluntarily controlled walking condition, subjects had to walk at the same speed as in unconstrained walking with a mechanical constraint, which is known to affect specifically the upper-leg muscles. The motor cortex was activated transcranially using a focal magnetic stimulation coil in order to elicit motor evoked potentials (MEPs) in the rectus femoris (RF) and the biceps femoris (BF).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Motor control can be achieved in the absence of awareness, even when performed intentionally. The aim of this study was to understand the mechanisms of the sudden awareness of our own movement. This was studied in locomotion because it is an automatic behavior which can be intentionally modulated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This experiment investigates the interaction of different sensory cues in the control of propulsive forces in human gait which in turn allow the body's forward progression to be regulated. The aim of this work was to determine how optic flow and leg-somatosensory feedback interact in this control. We therefore determined whether the responses to sinusoidal perturbations of optic flow were accentuated when leg-somatosensory feedback was modified by varying the support resistance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF