Movement preparation in Parkinson's disease: Time course and distribution of movement-related potentials in a movement precueing task
Publication year
1996Publisher
Oxford univ press united kingdom
Source
Brain, 119, (1996), pp. 1689-1704ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Cognitive Neuroscience
SW OZ DCC CO
Journal title
Brain
Volume
vol. 119
Page start
p. 1689
Page end
p. 1704
Abstract
Investigations of the effects of advance information on movement preparation in Parkinson's disease using reaction time (RT) measures have yielded contradictory results. In order to obtain direct information regarding the time course of movement preparation, we combined RT measurements in a movement precueing task with multi-channel recordings of movement-related potentials in the present study. Movements of the index and middle fingers of the left and right hand were either precued or not by advance information regarding the side (left or right hand) of the required response. Reaction times were slower for patients than for control subjects. Both groups benefited equally from informative precues, indicating that patients utilized the advance information as effectively as control subjects. Lateralization of the movement-preceding cerebral activity [i.e. the lateralized readiness potential (LRP)] confirmed that patients used the available partial information to prepare their responses and started this process no later than controls. In conjunction with EMG onset times, the LRP onset measures allowed for a fractionation of the RTs, which provided clues to the stages where the slowness of Parkinson's disease patients might arise. No definite abnormalities of temporal parameters were found, but differences in the distribution of the lateralized movement-preceding activity between patients and controls suggested differences in the cortical organization of movement preparation. Differences in amplitude of the contingent negative variation (CNV) and differences in the way in which the CNV was modulated by the information given by the precue pointed in the same direction. A difference in amplitude of the P300 between patients and controls suggested that preprogramming a response required more effort from patients than from control subjects.
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- Academic publications [232231]
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- Faculty of Medical Sciences [89084]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [29102]
- Open Access publications [82734]
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