Using guitar learning to probe the Action Observation Network's response to visuomotor familiarity

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Using guitar learning to probe the Action Observation Network's response to visuomotor familiarity. / Gardner, Tom; Aglinskas, Aidas; Cross, Emily.
In: Neuroimage, Vol. 156, No. August, 08.2017, p. 174-189.

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Gardner T, Aglinskas A, Cross E. Using guitar learning to probe the Action Observation Network's response to visuomotor familiarity. Neuroimage. 2017 Aug;156(August):174-189. Epub 2017 May 4. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.04.060

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Gardner, Tom ; Aglinskas, Aidas ; Cross, Emily. / Using guitar learning to probe the Action Observation Network's response to visuomotor familiarity. In: Neuroimage. 2017 ; Vol. 156, No. August. pp. 174-189.

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Using guitar learning to probe the Action Observation Network's response to visuomotor familiarity

AU - Gardner, Tom

AU - Aglinskas, Aidas

AU - Cross, Emily

N1 - Open Access funded by Economic and Social Research Council

PY - 2017/8

Y1 - 2017/8

N2 - Watching other people move elicits engagement of a collection of sensorimotor brain regions collectively termed the Action Observation Network (AON). An extensive literature documents more robust AON responses when observing or executing familiar compared to unfamiliar actions, as well as a positive correlation between amplitude of AON response and an observer's familiarity with an observed or executed movement. On the other hand, emerging evidence shows patterns of AON activity counter to these findings, whereby in some circumstances, unfamiliar actions lead to greater AON engagement than familiar actions. In an attempt to reconcile these conflicting findings, some have proposed that the relationship between AON response amplitude and action familiarity is nonlinear in nature. In the present study, we used an elaborate guitar training intervention to probe the relationship between movement familiarity and AON engagement during action execution and action observation tasks. Participants underwent fMRI scanning while executing one set of guitar sequences with a scanner-compatible bass guitar and observing a second set of sequences. Participants then acquired further physical practice or observational experience with half of these stimuli outside the scanner across 3 days. Participants then returned for an identical scanning session, wherein they executed and observed equal numbers of familiar (trained) and unfamiliar (untrained) guitar sequences. Via region of interest analyses, we extracted activity within AON regions engaged during both scanning sessions, and then fit linear, quadratic and cubic regression models to these data. The data best support the cubic regression models, suggesting that the response profile within key sensorimotor brain regions associated with the AON respond to action familiarity in a nonlinear manner. Moreover, by probing the subjective nature of the prediction error signal, we show results consistent with a predictive coding account of AON engagement during action observation and execution that also takes into account effects of changes in neural efficiency.

AB - Watching other people move elicits engagement of a collection of sensorimotor brain regions collectively termed the Action Observation Network (AON). An extensive literature documents more robust AON responses when observing or executing familiar compared to unfamiliar actions, as well as a positive correlation between amplitude of AON response and an observer's familiarity with an observed or executed movement. On the other hand, emerging evidence shows patterns of AON activity counter to these findings, whereby in some circumstances, unfamiliar actions lead to greater AON engagement than familiar actions. In an attempt to reconcile these conflicting findings, some have proposed that the relationship between AON response amplitude and action familiarity is nonlinear in nature. In the present study, we used an elaborate guitar training intervention to probe the relationship between movement familiarity and AON engagement during action execution and action observation tasks. Participants underwent fMRI scanning while executing one set of guitar sequences with a scanner-compatible bass guitar and observing a second set of sequences. Participants then acquired further physical practice or observational experience with half of these stimuli outside the scanner across 3 days. Participants then returned for an identical scanning session, wherein they executed and observed equal numbers of familiar (trained) and unfamiliar (untrained) guitar sequences. Via region of interest analyses, we extracted activity within AON regions engaged during both scanning sessions, and then fit linear, quadratic and cubic regression models to these data. The data best support the cubic regression models, suggesting that the response profile within key sensorimotor brain regions associated with the AON respond to action familiarity in a nonlinear manner. Moreover, by probing the subjective nature of the prediction error signal, we show results consistent with a predictive coding account of AON engagement during action observation and execution that also takes into account effects of changes in neural efficiency.

KW - Action Observation Network

KW - Familiarity

KW - Direct matching

KW - Predictive coding

KW - ROI regression

KW - fMRI

KW - Neural efficiency

KW - Music learning

KW - Guitar

U2 - 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.04.060

DO - 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.04.060

M3 - Article

VL - 156

SP - 174

EP - 189

JO - Neuroimage

JF - Neuroimage

SN - 1053-8119

IS - August

ER -