Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7312321 | Cortex | 2017 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
In each of two FB or PA sessions, we delivered Real (inhibitory) or Sham continuous theta-burst (cTBS) to the left-M1, before 150 training-trials. We then tested learning with 42 trials without feedback immediately after learning and again 1-h after cTBS. Compared to Sham, Real cTBS reduced performance during FB-learning, when learning was immediately reinforced, but not when knowledge was tested after PA learning. Furthermore, when FB-based memory was tested after learning without immediate incentive, there was no effect of TMS compared to post-PA test performance, showing the TMS effect operated only in the presence of incentive and feedback. We conclude that M1 is a node in a network underlying feedback-driven procedural learning and inhibitory rTMS there results in decreased network efficiency.
Keywords
rTMSMEPMMEMTLWPTcTBSDLPFCMPCAMTNARTNational Adult Reading Testactive motor thresholdelectromyogramEMGfirst dorsal interosseous muscleFeedbackHuntington's diseaseParkinson's diseaseRepetitive transcranial magnetic stimulationContinuous theta burst stimulationfunctional magnetic resonance imagingfMRIFDIbasal gangliaMotor cortexdorsolateral prefrontal cortexMedial temporal lobeprimary motor areaMotor evoked potentialWeather prediction task
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Authors
Leonora Wilkinson, Philip J. Koshy, Adam Steel, Devin Bageac, Selene Schintu, Eric M. Wassermann,