Neural processing of goal and non-goal-directed movements on the smartphone

Q4 Neuroscience
Ruchella Kock, Enea Ceolini, Lysanne Groenewegen, Arko Ghosh
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The discrete behavioral events captured on the smartphone touchscreen may help unravel real-world neural processing. We find that neural signals (EEG) surrounding a touchscreen event show a distinctly contralateral motor preparation followed by visual processing, and the consolidation of information. We leveraged these events in conjunction with kinematic recordings of the thumb and an artificial neural network to separate highly similar movements according to whether they resulted in a smartphone touch (goal-directed) or not (non-goal-directed). Despite their kinematic similarity, the signatures of neural control of movement and the post-movement processing were substantially dampened for the non-goal-directed movements, and these movements uniquely evoked error-related signals. We speculate that these apparently unnecessary movements are common in the real world and although inconsequential the brain provides limited motor preparation and tracks the action outcome. The neural signals surrounding discrete smartphone events can enable the study of neural processes that are difficult to capture in conventional laboratory-based tasks.

智能手机上目标和非目标定向运动的神经处理
智能手机触摸屏上捕捉到的离散行为事件可能有助于解开现实世界中的神经处理。我们发现,触摸屏事件周围的神经信号(EEG)显示出明显的对侧运动准备,随后是视觉处理和信息整合。我们将这些事件与拇指的运动学记录和人工神经网络结合起来,根据它们是否导致智能手机触摸(目标导向)或(非目标导向)来分离高度相似的动作。尽管它们在运动学上相似,但对于非目标定向运动,运动的神经控制和运动后处理的特征被显著抑制,并且这些运动独特地引发了与误差相关的信号。我们推测,这些看似不必要的动作在现实世界中很常见,尽管无关紧要,但大脑提供的运动准备和跟踪动作结果有限。围绕离散智能手机事件的神经信号可以研究传统实验室任务中难以捕捉的神经过程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neuroimage. Reports
Neuroimage. Reports Neuroscience (General)
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
87 days
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