首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>The Journal of Neuroscience >Enhanced Spontaneous Oscillations in the Supplementary Motor Area Are Associated with Sleep-Dependent Offline Learning of Finger-Tapping Motor-Sequence Task
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Enhanced Spontaneous Oscillations in the Supplementary Motor Area Are Associated with Sleep-Dependent Offline Learning of Finger-Tapping Motor-Sequence Task

机译:辅助运动区域中增强的自发振荡与指尖运动序列任务的依赖睡眠的离线学习相关

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摘要

Sleep is beneficial for various types of learning and memory, including a finger-tapping motor-sequence task. However, methodological issues hinder clarification of the crucial cortical regions for sleep-dependent consolidation in motor-sequence learning. Here, to investigate the core cortical region for sleep-dependent consolidation of finger-tapping motor-sequence learning, while human subjects were asleep, we measured spontaneous cortical oscillations by magnetoencephalography together with polysomnography, and source-localized the origins of oscillations using individual anatomical brain information from MRI. First, we confirmed that performance of the task at a retest session after sleep significantly increased compared with performance at the training session before sleep. Second, spontaneous δ and fast-σ oscillations significantly increased in the supplementary motor area (SMA) during post-training compared with pretraining sleep, showing significant and high correlation with the performance increase. Third, the increased spontaneous oscillations in the SMA correlated with performance improvement were specific to slow-wave sleep. We also found that correlations of δ oscillation between the SMA and the prefrontal and between the SMA and the parietal regions tended to decrease after training. These results suggest that a core brain region for sleep-dependent consolidation of the finger-tapping motor-sequence learning resides in the SMA contralateral to the trained hand and is mediated by spontaneous δ and fast-σ oscillations, especially during slow-wave sleep. The consolidation may arise along with possible reorganization of a larger-scale cortical network that involves the SMA and cortical regions outside the motor regions, including prefrontal and parietal regions.
机译:睡眠对于各种类型的学习和记忆都是有益的,包括敲击运动序列任务。但是,方法学问题阻碍了对运动序列学习中依赖睡眠的巩固的关键皮质区域的阐明。在这里,为了研究在人类受试者入睡时睡眠依赖手指敲击运动序列学习的睡眠依赖巩固的核心皮层区域,我们通过磁脑电图和多导睡眠图测量了自发性皮层振荡,并使用个体解剖学对振荡的起源进行了源定位来自MRI的大脑信息。首先,我们证实与睡眠前训练相比,睡眠后重新测试任务的执行能力显着提高。第二,与训练前的睡眠相比,训练后的补充运动区(SMA)的自发δ和快速σ振荡显着增加,显示出与运动表现的显着高度相关。第三,与性能改善相关的SMA自发振荡增加是慢波睡​​眠所特有的。我们还发现,训练后,SMA与前额叶之间以及SMA与顶叶区域之间的δ振荡相关性趋于降低。这些结果表明,手指依赖的运动序列学习的睡眠依赖巩固的核心大脑区域位于受过训练的手对侧的SMA中,并由自发的δ和快速σ振荡介导,特别是在慢波睡眠过程中。合并可能伴随着更大规模的皮质网络的重组而出现,该网络涉及SMA和运动区域外的皮质区域,包括前额叶和顶叶区域。

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