TY - JOUR A1 - Gianelli, Claudia A1 - Kühne, Katharina A1 - Lo Presti, Sara A1 - Mencaraglia, Silvia A1 - Dalla Volta, Riccardo T1 - Action processing in the motor system BT - Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) evidence of shared mechanisms in the visual and linguistic modalities JF - Brain and cognition : a journal of experimental and clinical research N2 - In two experiments, we compared the dynamics of corticospinal excitability when processing visually or linguistically presented tool-oriented hand actions in native speakers and sequential bilinguals. In a third experiment we used the same procedure to test non-motor, low-level stimuli, i.e. scrambled images and pseudo-words. Stimuli were presented in sequence: pictures (tool + tool-oriented hand action or their scrambled counterpart) and words (tool noun + tool-action verb or pseudo-words). Experiment 1 presented German linguistic stimuli to native speakers, while Experiment 2 presented English stimuli to non-natives. Experiment 3 tested Italian native speakers. Single-pulse trascranial magnetic stimulation (spTMS) was applied to the left motor cortex at five different timings: baseline, 200 ms after tool/noun onset, 150, 350 and 500 ms after hand/verb onset with motor-evoked potentials (MEPs) recorded from the first dorsal interosseous (FDI) and abductor digiti minimi (ADM) muscles. We report strong similarities in the dynamics of corticospinal excitability across the visual and linguistic modalities. MEPs' suppression started as early as 150 ms and lasted for the duration of stimulus presentation (500 ms). Moreover, we show that this modulation is absent for stimuli with no motor content. Overall, our study supports the notion of a core, overarching system of action semantics shared by different modalities. KW - TMS KW - motor cortex KW - action observation KW - action language KW - motor KW - inhibition KW - motor-evoked potentials Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bandc.2019.105510 SN - 0278-2626 SN - 1090-2147 VL - 139 PB - Elsevier CY - San Diego ER - TY - GEN A1 - Dordevic, Milos A1 - Hölzer, Sonja A1 - Russo, Augusta A1 - García Alanis, José Carlos A1 - Müller, Notger Germar T1 - The Role of the Precuneus in Human Spatial Updating in a Real Environment Setting—A cTBS Study T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Gesundheitswissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - As we move through an environment, we update positions of our body relative to other objects, even when some objects temporarily or permanently leave our field of view—this ability is termed egocentric spatial updating and plays an important role in everyday life. Still, our knowledge about its representation in the brain is still scarce, with previous studies using virtual movements in virtual environments or patients with brain lesions suggesting that the precuneus might play an important role. However, whether this assumption is also true when healthy humans move in real environments where full body-based cues are available in addition to the visual cues typically used in many VR studies is unclear. Therefore, in this study we investigated the role of the precuneus in egocentric spatial updating in a real environment setting in 20 healthy young participants who underwent two conditions in a cross-over design: (a) stimulation, achieved through applying continuous theta-burst stimulation (cTBS) to inhibit the precuneus and (b) sham condition (activated coil turned upside down). In both conditions, participants had to walk back with blindfolded eyes to objects they had previously memorized while walking with open eyes. Simplified trials (without spatial updating) were used as control condition, to make sure the participants were not affected by factors such as walking blindfolded, vestibular or working memory deficits. A significant interaction was found, with participants performing better in the sham condition compared to real stimulation, showing smaller errors both in distance and angle. The results of our study reveal evidence of an important role of the precuneus in a real-environment egocentric spatial updating; studies on larger samples are necessary to confirm and further investigate this finding. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Gesundheitswissenschaftliche Reihe - 1 KW - precuneus KW - spatial updating KW - TMS KW - cTBS Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-565542 SP - 1 EP - 13 PB - Universitätsverlag Potsdam CY - Potsdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dordevic, Milos A1 - Hölzer, Sonja A1 - Russo, Augusta A1 - García Alanis, José Carlos A1 - Müller, Notger Germar T1 - The Role of the Precuneus in Human Spatial Updating in a Real Environment Setting—A cTBS Study JF - Life N2 - As we move through an environment, we update positions of our body relative to other objects, even when some objects temporarily or permanently leave our field of view—this ability is termed egocentric spatial updating and plays an important role in everyday life. Still, our knowledge about its representation in the brain is still scarce, with previous studies using virtual movements in virtual environments or patients with brain lesions suggesting that the precuneus might play an important role. However, whether this assumption is also true when healthy humans move in real environments where full body-based cues are available in addition to the visual cues typically used in many VR studies is unclear. Therefore, in this study we investigated the role of the precuneus in egocentric spatial updating in a real environment setting in 20 healthy young participants who underwent two conditions in a cross-over design: (a) stimulation, achieved through applying continuous theta-burst stimulation (cTBS) to inhibit the precuneus and (b) sham condition (activated coil turned upside down). In both conditions, participants had to walk back with blindfolded eyes to objects they had previously memorized while walking with open eyes. Simplified trials (without spatial updating) were used as control condition, to make sure the participants were not affected by factors such as walking blindfolded, vestibular or working memory deficits. A significant interaction was found, with participants performing better in the sham condition compared to real stimulation, showing smaller errors both in distance and angle. The results of our study reveal evidence of an important role of the precuneus in a real-environment egocentric spatial updating; studies on larger samples are necessary to confirm and further investigate this finding. KW - precuneus KW - spatial updating KW - TMS KW - cTBS Y1 - 2022 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3390/life12081239 SN - 2075-1729 VL - 12 SP - 1 EP - 13 PB - MDPI CY - Basel, Schweiz ET - 8 ER - TY - THES A1 - Kuhnke, Philipp T1 - The neural basis of conceptual knowledge retrieval T1 - Die neuronale Basis der Konzeptverarbeitung BT - insights from fMRI & TMS in the healthy human brain BT - Einblicke durch fMRT & TMS im gesunden menschlichen Gehirn N2 - Conceptual knowledge about objects, people and events in the world is central to human cognition, underlying core cognitive abilities such as object recognition and use, and word comprehension. Previous research indicates that concepts consist of perceptual and motor features represented in modality-specific perceptual-motor brain regions. In addition, cross-modal convergence zones integrate modality-specific features into more abstract conceptual representations. However, several questions remain open: First, to what extent does the retrieval of perceptual-motor features depend on the concurrent task? Second, how do modality-specific and cross-modal regions interact during conceptual knowledge retrieval? Third, which brain regions are causally relevant for conceptually-guided behavior? This thesis addresses these three key issues using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in the healthy human brain. Study 1 - an fMRI activation study - tested to what extent the retrieval of sound and action features of concepts, and the resulting engagement of auditory and somatomotor brain regions depend on the concurrent task. 40 healthy human participants performed three different tasks - lexical decision, sound judgment, and action judgment - on words with a high or low association to sounds and actions. We found that modality-specific regions selectively respond to task-relevant features: Auditory regions selectively responded to sound features during sound judgments, and somatomotor regions selectively responded to action features during action judgments. Unexpectedly, several regions (e.g. the left posterior parietal cortex; PPC) exhibited a task-dependent response to both sound and action features. We propose these regions to be "multimodal", and not "amodal", convergence zones which retain modality-specific information. Study 2 - an fMRI connectivity study - investigated the functional interaction between modality-specific and multimodal areas during conceptual knowledge retrieval. Using the above fMRI data, we asked (1) whether modality-specific and multimodal regions are functionally coupled during sound and action feature retrieval, (2) whether their coupling depends on the task, (3) whether information flows bottom-up, top-down, or bidirectionally, and (4) whether their coupling is behaviorally relevant. We found that functional coupling between multimodal and modality-specific areas is task-dependent, bidirectional, and relevant for conceptually-guided behavior. Left PPC acted as a connectivity "switchboard" that flexibly adapted its coupling to task-relevant modality-specific nodes. Hence, neuroimaging studies 1 and 2 suggested a key role of left PPC as a multimodal convergence zone for conceptual knowledge. However, as neuroimaging is correlational, it remained unknown whether left PPC plays a causal role as a multimodal conceptual hub. Therefore, study 3 - a TMS study - tested the causal relevance of left PPC for sound and action feature retrieval. We found that TMS over left PPC selectively impaired action judgments on low sound-low action words, as compared to sham stimulation. Computational simulations of the TMS-induced electrical field revealed that stronger stimulation of left PPC was associated with worse performance on action, but not sound, judgments. These results indicate that left PPC causally supports conceptual processing when action knowledge is task-relevant and cannot be compensated by sound knowledge. Our findings suggest that left PPC is specialized for action knowledge, challenging the view of left PPC as a multimodal conceptual hub. Overall, our studies support "hybrid theories" which posit that conceptual processing involves both modality-specific perceptual-motor regions and cross-modal convergence zones. In our new model of the conceptual system, we propose conceptual processing to rely on a representational hierarchy from modality-specific to multimodal up to amodal brain regions. Crucially, this hierarchical system is flexible, with different regions and connections being engaged in a task-dependent fashion. Our model not only reconciles the seemingly opposing grounded cognition and amodal theories, it also incorporates task dependency of conceptually-related brain activity and connectivity, thereby resolving several current issues on the neural basis of conceptual knowledge retrieval. N2 - Konzeptuelles Wissen über Objekte, Menschen und Ereignisse in der Welt ist zentral für die menschliche Kognition. So unterliegt es kognitiven Fähigkeiten wie der Objekterkennung und -benutzung und dem Wortverständnis. Die bisherige Forschung legt nahe, dass Konzepte aus perzeptuellen und motorischen Merkmalen bestehen, die in modalitätsspezifischen perzeptuell-motorischen Hirnregionen repräsentiert sind. Darüber hinaus integrieren crossmodale Konvergenzzonen modalitätsspezifische Merkmale in abstraktere konzeptuelle Repräsentationen. Mehrere Fragen bleiben jedoch offen. Erstens: Inwiefern hängt die Aktivierung perzeptuell-motorischer Areale von der Aufgabe ab? Zweitens: Wie interagieren modalitätsspezifische und crossmodale Areale miteinander? Drittens: Welche Hirnregionen sind kausal relevant für konzeptgeleitetes Verhalten? Diese Dissertation adressiert diese Kernfragen mittels funktioneller Magnetresonanztomografie (fMRT) und transkranieller Magnetstimulation (TMS) im gesunden menschlichen Gehirn. Studie 1—eine fMRT Aktivierungsstudie—prüfte, inwiefern die Aktivierung von Geräusch– und Handlungsmerkmalen von der Aufgabe abhängt. Vierzig gesunde Probanden führten drei verschiedene Aufgaben—lexikalische Entscheidungen, Geräuschentscheidungen, Handlungsentscheidungen—bei Wörtern mit einer hohen oder niedrigen Assoziation zu Geräuschen und Handlungen aus. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass modalitätsspezifische Regionen selektiv für aufgabenrelevante Merkmale aktiv wurden: Auditorische Regionen aktivierten selektiv für Geräuschmerkmale während Geräuschentscheidungen. Somatomotorische Areale hingehen aktivierten selektiv für Handlungsmerkmale während Handlungsentscheidungen. Überraschenderweise zeigten mehrere Regionen (z.B. der linke posteriore Parietalkortex; PPC) aufgabenabhängige Aktivität für Geräusch- und Handlungsmerkmale. Wir schlagen vor, dass die Regionen „multimodale“ (und nicht „amodale“) Konvergenzzonen sind, die modalitätsspezifische Informationen behalten. Studie 2—eine fMRT Konnektivitätsstudie—untersuchte die funktionale Interaktion zwischen modalitätsspezifischen und multimodalen Arealen während der Konzeptverarbeitung. Mit denselben fMRT-Daten fragten wir, (1) ob modalitätsspezifische und multimodale Areale während der Verarbeitung von Geräusch- und Handlungsmerkmalen zusammenarbeiten, (2) ob deren Interaktion von der Aufgabe abhängt, (3) in welche Richtung die Information fließt und (4) ob die Interaktion das Verhalten der Probanden bestimmt. Wir fanden heraus, dass die funktionale Interaktion zwischen modalitätsspezifischen und multimodalen Arealen aufgabenabhängig, bidirektional und relevant für das Verhalten ist. Der linke PPC agierte als „Schaltstelle“, die flexibel ihre Konnektivität zu aufgabenrelevanten modalitätsspezifischen Knoten adaptierte. Studien 1 und 2 legen also eine zentrale Rolle des linken PPC als multimodale Konvergenzzone für konzeptuelles Wissen nahe. Da bildgebende Verfahren jedoch korrelativ sind, bleibt unklar, ob der linke LPP tatsächlich eine kausale Rolle als multimodales konzeptuelles Areal spielt. Studie 3—eine TMS Studie—testete daher die kausale Relevanz des linken PPC für Geräusch- und Handlungswissen. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass TMS über dem linken PPC (im Vergleich zu Placebo-Stimulation) selektiv Handlungsentscheidungen störte. Computersimulationen des TMS-induzierten elektrischen Feldes zeigten zudem, dass stärkere Stimulation des linken PPC mit schlechterer Verhaltensleistung bei Handlungsentscheidungen, aber nicht bei Geräuschentscheidungen, assoziiert war. Diese Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, dass der linke PPC auf Handlungswissen spezialisiert ist, was die Sicht des PPC als multimodales konzeptuelles Areal herausfordert. Insgesamt unterstützen unsere Studien sogenannte Hybridtheorien, die vorschlagen, dass konzeptuelle Verarbeitung sowohl modalitätsspezifische als auch crossmodale Hirnregionen involviert. Unser neues Modell des konzeptuellen Systems postuliert, dass konzeptuelle Verarbeitung auf einer repräsentationalen Hierarchie von modalitätsspezifischen zu multimodalen bis hin zu amodalen Regionen basiert. Dieses hierarchische System ist flexibel, sodass verschiedene Regionen und Verbindungen in aufgabenabhängiger Weise aktiviert werden. Unser Modell bringt somit nicht nur die scheinbar widersprüchlichen grounded cognition und amodalen Theorien in Einklang, sondern es berücksichtigt auch die Aufgabenabhängigkeit von konzeptueller Hirnaktivität und -konnektivität und klärt so einige aktuelle Kernfragen zur neuronalen Basis der Konzeptverarbeitung. KW - neuroscience KW - cognitive science KW - cognition KW - semantics KW - concepts KW - fMRI KW - TMS KW - neuroimaging KW - brain stimulation KW - language KW - Kognition KW - Kognitionswissenschaft KW - Konzept KW - Gedächtnis KW - Semantik KW - Sprache KW - Bildgebung KW - Hirnstimulation KW - Neurostimulation KW - funktionelle Magnetresonanztomografie KW - fMRT KW - transkranielle Magnetstimulation KW - TMS Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-514414 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gianelli, Claudia A1 - Dalla Volta, Riccardo T1 - Does listening to action-related sentences modulate the activity of the motor system? BT - Replication of a combined TMS and behavioral study JF - Frontiers in psychology N2 - The neurophysiological and behavioral correlates of action-related language processing have been debated for long time. A precursor in this field was the study by Buccino et al. (2005) combining transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and behavioral measures (reaction times, RTs) to study the effect of listening to hand- and foot-related sentences. In the TMS experiment, the authors showed a decrease of motor evoked potentials (MEPs) recorded from hand muscles when processing hand-related verbs as compared to foot-related verbs. Similarly, MEPs recorded from leg muscles decreased when participants processed foot-related as compared to hand-related verbs. In the behavioral experiment, using the same stimuli and a semantic decision task the authors found slower RTs when the participants used the body effector (hand or foot) involved in the actual execution of the action expressed by the presented verb to give their motor responses. These findings were interpreted as an interference effect due to a simultaneous involvement of the motor system in both a language and a motor task. Our replication aimed to enlarge the sample size and replicate the findings with higher statistical power. The TMS experiment showed a significant modulation of hand MEPs, but in the sense of a motor facilitation when processing hand-related verbs. On the contrary, the behavioral experiment did not show significant results. The results are discussed within the general debate on the time-course of the modulation of motor cortex during implicit and explicit language processing and in relation to the studies on action observation/understanding. KW - action language KW - motor system KW - TMS KW - motor resonance KW - interference KW - replication Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01511 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 5 SP - 8 PB - Frontiers Research Foundation CY - Lausanne ER - TY - GEN A1 - Gianelli, Claudia A1 - Dalla Volta, Riccardo T1 - Does listening to action-related sentences modulate the activity of the motor system? BT - Replication of a combined TMS and behavioral study N2 - The neurophysiological and behavioral correlates of action-related language processing have been debated for long time. A precursor in this field was the study by Buccino et al. (2005) combining transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and behavioral measures (reaction times, RTs) to study the effect of listening to hand- and foot-related sentences. In the TMS experiment, the authors showed a decrease of motor evoked potentials (MEPs) recorded from hand muscles when processing hand-related verbs as compared to foot-related verbs. Similarly, MEPs recorded from leg muscles decreased when participants processed foot-related as compared to hand-related verbs. In the behavioral experiment, using the same stimuli and a semantic decision task the authors found slower RTs when the participants used the body effector (hand or foot) involved in the actual execution of the action expressed by the presented verb to give their motor responses. These findings were interpreted as an interference effect due to a simultaneous involvement of the motor system in both a language and a motor task. Our replication aimed to enlarge the sample size and replicate the findings with higher statistical power. The TMS experiment showed a significant modulation of hand MEPs, but in the sense of a motor facilitation when processing hand-related verbs. On the contrary, the behavioral experiment did not show significant results. The results are discussed within the general debate on the time-course of the modulation of motor cortex during implicit and explicit language processing and in relation to the studies on action observation/understanding. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Humanwissenschaftliche Reihe - paper 272 KW - action language KW - motor system KW - TMS KW - motor resonance KW - interference KW - replication Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-75173 ER -