Decision-making often manifests in behavior, typically yielding overt motor actions. This complex process requires the registration of sensory information with one's internal representation of the current context, before a categorical judgment of the most appropriate motor behavior can be issued. The construct concept of embodied decision-making encapsulates this sequence of complex processes, whereby behaviorally salient information from the environment is represented in an abstracted space of potential motor actions rather than only in an abstract cognitive "decision" space. Theoretical foundations and some empirical evidence account for support the involvement of premotor cortical circuits in embodied cognitive functions. Animal models show that premotor circuits participate in the registration and evaluation of actions performed by peers in social situations, that is, prior to controlling one's voluntary movements guided by arbitrary stimulus-response rules. However, such evidence from human data is currently limited. Here we used time-resolved magnetoencephalography imaging to characterize activations of the premotor cortex as human participants observed arbitrary, non-biological visual stimuli that either respected or violated a simple stimulus-response association rule. The participants had learned this rule previously, either actively, by performing a motor task (active learning), or passively, by observing a computer perform the same task (passive learning). We discovered that the human premotor cortex is activated during the passive observation of the correct execution of a sequence of events according to a rule learned previously. Premotor activation also differs when the subjects observe incorrect stimulus sequences. These premotor effects are present even when the observed events are of a non-motor, abstract nature, and even when the stimulus-response association rule was learned via passive observations of a computer agent performing the task, without requiring overt motor actions from the human participant. We found evidence of these phenomena by tracking cortical beta-band signaling in temporal alignment with the observation of task events and behavior. We conclude that premotor cortical circuits that are typically engaged during voluntary motor behavior are also involved in the interpretation of events of a non-ecological, unfamiliar nature but related to a learned abstract rule. As such, the present study provides the first evidence of neurophysiological processes of embodied decision-making in human premotor circuits when the observed events do not involve motor actions of a third party.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.06.06.543581 | DOI Listing |
Int J Mol Sci
February 2025
Institute of Chemistry, São Paulo State University, Araraquara 14800-060, Brazil.
Although peptides have been shown to have biological functions in neurodegenerative diseases, their role in Parkinson's disease has been understudied. A previous study by our group, which used a 6-hydroxydopamine zebrafish model, suggested that nine intracellular peptides may play a part in this condition. In this context, our aim is to better understand the role of five of these nine peptides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCortex
March 2025
Trinity Institute of Neurosciences, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.
Recent studies have demonstrated that the representation of peri-personal space (PPS) can be strongly modulated by the intention to execute a spatially-directed hand-movement. However, the question of whether analogous motor-induced PPS modulations can be observed during the planning and execution of goal-directed lower limbs movements has been scarcely investigated. Here we asked whether changes in the visuo-tactile PPS maps occur during the planning of a goal directed foot-movement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neural Eng
March 2025
Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Tehran College of Engineering, North Kargar Street, Tehran, Tehran, Tehran, 1439957131, Iran (the Islamic Republic of).
Despite remarkable advances in EMG-based hand motor decoding, developing a practical and reliable decoder for robotic prosthetic hands remains unsolved. This study highlights inter-individual, inter-session, and intra-session variabilities of EMG signals as practical challenges and introduces a novel personalized and adaptive motor decoding framework, designed to mitigate their impact and improve hand motor decoding. A dataset was collected from twelve participants (8 male, 4 female), incorporating EMG signals from three forearm muscles during 20 repetitions of 9 distinct hand motions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
March 2025
Padova Neuroscience Center, University of Padova, Padova 35131, Italy.
Resting brain activity, in the absence of explicit tasks, appears as distributed spatiotemporal patterns that reflect structural connectivity and correlate with behavioral traits. However, its role in shaping behavior remains unclear. Recent evidence shows that resting-state spatial patterns not only align with task-evoked topographies but also encode distinct visual (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
February 2025
Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Automatics and Computer Science, Opole University of Technology, Opole, Poland.
Background: The study includes a correlation analysis of EMG signals of upper limb muscle activity in wheelchair fencers. The aim of the study was to investigate neuromuscular conduction in wheelchair fencers using the EMG signal from their upper limb muscles.
Methods: Wavelet transform analysis was used to examine the biosignals.
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