Action Selection and Motor Decision Making: Insights from Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. TMS in Action Selection
2.1. SpTMS
2.2. PpTMS
2.3. Dual-Site TMS
3. TMS in Value-Based Motor Decision Making
4. Conclusions and Future Perspectives
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reference | Delay Period (Duration—Informativeness of the Warning Cue) | Task-Related TMS Timings | TMS Location | Main Findings and Elements of Novelty |
---|---|---|---|---|
Leocani et al. (2000) [24] | No | Between 20 and 400 ms after go signal | vertex | RP: MEPs facilitation in selected muscles; MEPs suppression in non-selected muscles; left hemispheric dominance for movements |
Burle et al. (2002) [12] | Yes (1000 ms—uninformative) | 1/4, 1/2, 3/4, and the whole first decile of individual RT distribution | left M1 | RP: increase CSP duration in non-selected muscles; decrease CSP duration in selected muscles |
Duque & Ivry (2009) [17] | Yes (between 900 and 1200 ms—informative and uninformative) | 800 ms after warning cue + 70 ms before individual RT | right M1 | DP: stronger MEPs inhibition in (potentially) selected muscles than non-selected muscles |
Duque et al. (2010) [14] | Yes (between 900 and 1200 ms—uninformative, partially and fully informative) | 100, 800 ms after warning cue + 50, 100, 150, 200, 250 ms after go signal | right M1 | DP: MEPs inhibition in (potentially) selected muscles and non-selected muscles, but not irrelevant muscles |
Tandonnet et al. (2012) [31] | Yes (500 or 2500 ms—uninformative) | Go signal + 6 timings between 60 ms after go signal and the first decile of individual RT distribution | left M1 | RP: increase CSP duration in non-selected muscles; decrease CSP duration in selected muscles |
Duque et al. (2014) [15] | No and Yes (900 ms—uninformative) | 890 ms after warning cue + 50, 100, 150, 200, 250 ms after go signal | right M1 | RP: transient MEPs inhibition in selected muscles (inhibition in selected muscles not restricted to the delay period of choice RT tasks) |
Labruna et al. (2014) [23] | Yes (900 ms—informative) | 800 ms after warning cue | right M1 | DP: MEPs inhibition in selected muscles; MEPs inhibition in non-selected muscles is constrained by anatomical and/or functional similarity |
Greenhouse et al. (2015) [18] | No and Yes (900 ms—informative) | 800 ms after warning cue + 150 ms after go signal | right M1 | DP: MEPs inhibition in selected muscles, non-selected muscles and irrelevant muscles |
Klein et al. (2016) [21] | No and Yes (500 ms—partially and fully informative) | 450 ms after warning cue + 75, 125, 175, 225, 275 ms after go signal | right and left M1 | DP: similar inhibitory changes in left and right M1 RP: constant and milder inhibition of MEPs in left non-selected muscles; initial facilitation and later stronger inhibition of MEPs in right non-selected muscles; left hemispheric dominance for movements |
Quoilin et al. (2016) [27] | Yes (between 1000 and 1200 ms—informative) | 950 ms after warning cue | right and left M1 | DP: MEPs changes in selected muscles are sensitive to task design |
Hannah et al. (2018) [19] | Yes (500 ms—uninformative) | Warning cue + 250 ms after warning cue + go signal + 35%, 70% of mean RT | left M1 | DP and RP: MEPs inhibition pertains to a specific set of excitatory inputs, instead of being global; greater inhibition leads to faster RT |
Poole et al. (2018) [26] | No and Yes (500 ms—informative) | 200, 300, 400 ms after warning cue | right and left M1 | DP: unchanged MEPs in dominant selected muscles, MEPs inhibition in non-dominant non-selected muscles; MEPs facilitation in non-dominant selected muscles, MEPs inhibition in dominant non-selected muscles; effects are sensitive to task experience |
Quoilin et al. (2019) [28] | No | Go signal + 80, 130, 250, 300, 350 ms after go signal | right and left M1 | RP: MEPs facilitation in selected muscles; unchanged MEPs in non-selected muscles; MEPs inhibition in irrelevant muscles of the non-responding hand |
Reference | Brain Mechanism Targeted | ISI (ms) | Delay Period (Duration—Informativeness of the Warning Cue) | Task-Related TMS Timings | TMS Location | Main Findings and Elements of Novelty |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Koch et al. (2006) [22] | PMd–M1 * | 8 | Yes (between 1000 and 3000 ms—uninformative) | 50, 75, 100, 125, 150, 200 ms after go signal | CP: left (right) PMd TP: right (left) M1 | RP: left PMd facilitates MEPs in left selected muscles and suppresses MEPs in left non-selected muscles; right PMd suppresses MEPs in right non-selected muscles |
Boorman et al. (2007) [11] | PMd–M1 | 8 | No | 50, 75, 100 ms after go signal | CP: left (right) PMd TP: right (left) M1 | RP: PMd facilitates MEPs |
O’Shea et al. (2007) [25] | PMd–M1* | 8 | No | 50, 75, 100, 125, 150 ms after go signal | CP: left (right) PMd TP: right (left) M1 | RP: PMd facilitates MEPs; absence of hemispheric asymmetries in PMd–M1 interactions |
Duque & Ivry (2009) [17] | SICI | 3 | Yes (between 900 and 1200 ms—informative and uninformative) | 800 ms after warning cue | right M1 | DP: SICI release in selected muscles; unchanged SICI in non-selected muscles |
Soto et al. (2010) [30] | SICI | 2.5 | Yes (between 500 and 1800 ms—uninformative) | Go signal + 125, 100, 75, 50, 25 ms before individual RT | left M1 | RP: SICI release in selected muscles; unchanged SICI in non-selected muscles |
Hinder et al. (2018) [20] | IHI | 10, 40 | Yes (500 ms—informative and uninformative) | Warning cue + go signal + 25%, 50%, 80% of individual RT | CP: left M1 TP: right M1 | RP: IHI (ISI10) release in selected muscles and non-selected muscles for uninformative warning cues; IHI (ISI10) release in selected muscles and unchanged IHI in non-selected muscles for informative warning cues. Effects are sensitive to ISIs |
Reference | Task and Features | Task-Related TMS Timings | TMS Location | Main Findings and Elements of Novelty |
---|---|---|---|---|
Klein et al. (2012) [33] | Hand selection task with ambiguous and unambiguous trials | Go signal + 0.17, 0.33, 0.50, 0.67 × 66% of individual median RT | Right M1 | Larger left MEPs in the rewardbiased, compared to rewardneutral (especially in ambiguous trials); link between reward-induced effects on MEP and movement preferences |
Klein-Flügge & Bestmann (2012) [36] | Value-decision task with choice and forced choice trials | Forced choice trials: 10%, 35%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80% of individual mean forced choice RT (FC-RT). Choice trials: 10%, 45% FC-RT, 45% FC-RT + 0.25*RT difference between choice and forced choice trials (ΔRT), 45% FC-RT + 0.5*ΔRT, 45% FC-RT + 0.75*ΔRT, 45% FC-RT + ΔRT | Left M1 | MEPs differences between selected and non-selected muscles during the decision period in choice trials; MEPs in choice trials vary as a function of the expected value difference for alternative responses |
Cos et al. (2014) [34] | Reach-decision task for movements with different biomechanical costs | 1, 150, 200, 250, 300, 350 ms after stimuli onset | M1 | The predicted cost associated with action alternatives is reflected in MEP changes (larger MEPs for less effortful movements early in the trial) |
Mooshagian et al. (2015) [38] | Decision-making task manipulating reward probability/uncertainty and task framing | 250 ms after stimuli onset | Left M1 | MEPs linearly increase with reward probability in the find condition; varying the degree of outcome uncertainty does not result in MEPs modulation |
Derosiere et al. (2022) [35] | Tokens task with rewards and penalties | After 1, 4, 7 token jumps | Right and left M1 | Hasty motor decisions are supported by a broad motor facilitation in the selected body side together with a local suppression of motor representations surrounding the selected effector |
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Tecilla, M.; Guerra, A.; Rocchi, L.; Määttä, S.; Bologna, M.; Herrojo Ruiz, M.; Biundo, R.; Antonini, A.; Ferreri, F. Action Selection and Motor Decision Making: Insights from Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation. Brain Sci. 2022, 12, 639. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12050639
Tecilla M, Guerra A, Rocchi L, Määttä S, Bologna M, Herrojo Ruiz M, Biundo R, Antonini A, Ferreri F. Action Selection and Motor Decision Making: Insights from Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation. Brain Sciences. 2022; 12(5):639. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12050639
Chicago/Turabian StyleTecilla, Margherita, Andrea Guerra, Lorenzo Rocchi, Sara Määttä, Matteo Bologna, Maria Herrojo Ruiz, Roberta Biundo, Angelo Antonini, and Florinda Ferreri. 2022. "Action Selection and Motor Decision Making: Insights from Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation" Brain Sciences 12, no. 5: 639. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12050639