Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3047041 Clinical Neurophysiology 2008 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveThe allocation of attention to sensory stimulation and movement might influence cortical activity. Two experiments were conducted to investigate the effect of variation of intensity of attention (Experiment 1) and direction of attention (Experiment 2) on cortical excitability and short-interval intracortical inhibition (SICI) during performance of a simple index finger abduction task.MethodsSubjects responded to subtle cutaneous electrical stimulation delivered to the index finger while single and paired TMS pulses were delivered during muscle relaxation between successive responses. In Experiment 1, attentional resources allocated to the task were manipulated using a dual task paradigm involving a backward-counting task. In Experiment 2, spatial attention was varied by delivering cutaneous stimuli to the responding or the non-responding index finger.ResultsIn Experiment 1, SICI was reduced during performance, but was unaffected by variation in the intensity of attention. The results of Experiment 2, however, showed that SICI was significantly lower when attention was directed to the responding hand compared with when it was directed to the non-responding hand.ConclusionsWhile SICI was not affected by variation of attentional resources, it was influenced by spatial attention.SignificanceThese findings may be relevant in future investigations of the underlying neurophysiology of plasticity.

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