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. 2010 Oct 21:1:166.
doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2010.00166. eCollection 2010.

Mental imagery of speech and movement implicates the dynamics of internal forward models

Affiliations

Mental imagery of speech and movement implicates the dynamics of internal forward models

Xing Tian et al. Front Psychol. .

Abstract

The classical concept of efference copies in the context of internal forward models has stimulated productive research in cognitive science and neuroscience. There are compelling reasons to argue for such a mechanism, but finding direct evidence in the human brain remains difficult. Here we investigate the dynamics of internal forward models from an unconventional angle: mental imagery, assessed while recording high temporal resolution neuronal activity using magnetoencephalography. We compare two overt and covert tasks; our covert, mental imagery tasks are unconfounded by overt input/output demands - but in turn necessitate the development of appropriate multi-dimensional topographic analyses. Finger tapping (studies 1 and 2) and speech experiments (studies 3-5) provide temporally constrained results that implicate the estimation of an efference copy. We suggest that one internal forward model over parietal cortex subserves the kinesthetic feeling in motor imagery. Secondly, observed auditory neural activity ~170 ms after motor estimation in speech experiments (studies 3-5) demonstrates the anticipated auditory consequences of planned motor commands in a second internal forward model in imagery of speech production. Our results provide neurophysiological evidence from the human brain in favor of internal forward models deploying efference copies in somatosensory and auditory cortex, in finger tapping and speech production tasks, respectively, and also suggest the dynamics and sequential updating structure of internal forward models.

Keywords: MEG; articulation; auditory cortex; corollary discharge; efference copy; imagined speech; motor; parietal cortex.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
The model of motor control based on internal forward models and feedback. Four different components are included. The motor commands are first planned according to the intended movement (the blue shaded area). While the planned signal is sent to the peripheral motor system (the gray shaded area) to execute, a copy of such signal (motor efference copy) is available for the first internal forward model to estimate the following motor state (in red shaded area). A second efference copy, perceptual efference copy, is send to the second internal forward model to predict the perceptual consequence of such motor estimation (in red shaded area). The motor state will be updated according to both the estimated motor state and predicted perceptual consequence as well as the actual somatosensory and perceptual feedback (the green shaded area).
Figure 2
Figure 2
Experimental design. A single trial in each experiment is depicted. (A) Experiment 1. The trial begins with a 50-ms 1-kHz tone and participants respond either by pressing a button (execution) or by imagining pressing a button (imagery), at a constant, comfortable pace. (B) Experiment 2. Three 50-ms 1-kHz sinusoidal tones occur in a sequence at a constant pace (1/s). Participants are instructed to attend to the tempo of the tones and asked to respond either by pressing a button or by imaging pressing a button with the same pace. (C,D) Experiments 3 and 4. The procedure was identical to Experiments 1 and 2, respectively, except the tasks were different. Four different tasks that are pre-determined in each block are included in each experiment and presented in fixed order: articulation (A), articulation imagery (IA), hearing (H), and hearing imagery (IH). In A and IA, participants are instructed to either pronounce or imagine pronouncing the syllable [da]. In H, participants are instructed to passively listen to the vocalization of syllable [da] that are either in a male or female voice, in a random order. In IH, participants are instructed to imagine hearing the voice by opposite sex that they just heard in H. Notice that in Experiments 3 and 4, there is no preceding cue before the auditory stimuli in the hearing task. (E) Experiment 5. Four different pictures are used to indicate different tasks. In each trial, the visual cue is on screen for 1 s. Participants are instructed to respond after the offset of visual cues.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Description of angle measure and two hypothetical results of angle tests. (A) The angle measure in the angle test of response similarity. For the purposes of illustration, each high dimensional neural response pattern is represented by a two-dimensional vector. The similarity between the two topographies is indicated by the angle (θ) between them: the smaller the angle θ, the more similar the two response patterns. When two topographies are perfectly matched, θ equals 0. The angle measure (cosine value of θ) is computed, ranging from −1 to 1, where 1 stands for perfectly matched. (B) Two hypothetical results of angle tests, plotted as angle measures against time. The yellow and red lines represents the mean within angle measures and mean between angle measures across participants, with the color shaded areas surrounding the lines indicating the two standard error of the mean (SEM). The gray vertical shaded area around time 0 indicates the time window within which the data are averaged for further statistical tests. Two lines are separated throughout the entire time course of the measurement in the top plot, indicating the two response patterns are different; whereas the mean between angle measures overlap with the within angle measures in the bottom plot, indicating the two response patterns are statistically indistinguishable around time 0.
Figure 4
Figure 4
Waveforms and topographies of execution and imagery responses in Experiment 1. One typical participant's responses are presented for each response. A 700 ms responses are plotted beginning with the single tone onset. In each waveform plot, 124 sensors are included (excluding the sensors in the front whose signal-to-noise ratio is low) and each black line represents the time course of response of one sensor. The red line in each plot represents the root mean square (RMS) of field strength across all sensors. The dotted vertical line represents the median reaction time in the execution task. A clear dipole pattern was obtained for each response, where the red and blue colors represent the direction of magnetic field coming out of (source) or going into (sink) the skull. (A) Left, waveform of execution response. Three peaks were observed: the first two peaks around 100 and 200 ms were the auditory M100/200 complex, whereas the third peak around 550 ms was presumably the execution response. Right, the activity patterns in the execution task. The topography of execution response displayed a dipole pattern (highlighted in a green box) over the left frontal area, which presumably reflects the neural activity in the primary motor cortex evoked by the right finger movement. (B) Left, waveform of imagery response. After the auditory responses, only a weak response was observed, compared with the execution response during the similar time. Right, the activity patterns in imagery tasks. Compared to the activity patterns in the execution task, the response patterns in the imagery task (highlighted in a red box) exhibit more posterior responses over left parietal region.
Figure 5
Figure 5
Evaluation of the angle test and assessment of pattern similarity between execution and imagery responses. The results of pattern analyses across participants in Experiment 1 are shown. (A) Evaluating the angle test of response similarity using execution responses. This plot depicted the between angle measures comparing execution responses in execution-locked and cue-locked epochs (red) and within angle measures (yellow). The x-axis is centered at the peak time of execution response in cue-lock epoch. (B) Angle test between execution and imagery responses. This plot depicted the between angle measure comparing execution and imagery responses (red) and within angle measure (yellow). The x-axis is centered at the peak time of imagery response. In all plots, the yellow line and black shaded areas represent the mean and two SEM of the within angle measures, whereas the red line and green shaded areas represent the mean and two SEM of the between angle measures. Results in all plots are depicted 300 ms prior to and after the response peak times. In (A), the between angle measures approach the within angle measures only around the execution peak. In (B), the between angle measures were smaller than the within angle measures across time course. The gray vertical shaded areas centered at time 0 represent the 20 ms time window used for statistical tests.
Figure 6
Figure 6
Distance between ECDs of execution and imagery responses. (A) 2D plots in xy (axial), yz (sagittal), and xz (coronal) plains of distances between the individual imagery response and execution response in Experiment 1. All the distances between individual ECD positions for imagery response and execution response were calculated and these distances were plotted from a common reference point for all 12 participants. The coordinates used in all plots are arbitrary, which is defined by centering on the common reference point. The x-axis is left–right (right positive), y-axis is posterior–anterior (anterior positive), and z-axis is inferior–superior (superior positive). The green point at [0, 0, 0] is the common reference point and the distance between this reference point and each blank point represents the distance from individual ECD position for imagery response to ECD position for execution response. The distance from the red point to the reference point represents the mean distance between ECD positions for execution response to ECD positions of imagery response across 12 participants and the two SEM are depicted in red lines in each direction. (B) The mean ECD locations of imagery responses in Experiments 1 and 2 (axial and coronal view) registering on an ICBM 152 brain template. The imagery responses were located in inferior parietal cortex near anterior intraparietal sulcus.
Figure 7
Figure 7
ECDs of movement intention and motor imagery responses from one participant in Experiment 2. Two ECDs were modeled and displayed on an individual's T1-weighted anatomical MRI images (axial, sagittal, and coronal views) in execution and imagery tasks for one participant. The red points represent the location of the ECDs and the direction and length of the red lines represent the direction and the magnitude of the dipole projected on two-dimensional planes. (A) The ECD of movement intention response. The ECD of movement intention occurred 90 ms before the execution latency, where it is located in the in intraparietal sulcus. (B) The ECD of imagery response. The ECD of imagery response was also located in the similar intraparietal sulcus region.
Figure 8
Figure 8
Assessment of pattern similarity between responses of motor intention and responses in motor imagery. The results of pattern analyses across participants in Experiment 2 are shown. (A) Group activity pattern analysis between responses of motor intention in execution and kinesthetic feeling in imagery. The x-axis was centered at the latency of intention response in execution task. (B) Group activity pattern analysis between intention responses in execution and imagery tasks. The x-axis is centered at the latency of intention response in imagery task. In both plots, the yellow line and black shaded areas represent the mean and two SEM of the within angle measure, whereas the red line and green shaded areas represent the mean and two SEM of the between angle measure. The results in all plots are 300 ms prior to and after the response peak times. Both between angle measures approach the within angle measures around the intention response latencies. The gray vertical shaded areas centered at the peak latency of intention response time 0 represent 20 ms time window used for statistical tests.
Figure 9
Figure 9
Response topographies of all conditions in Experiment 4. Grand average topographies across all participants are presented for demonstration purpose only. Clear dipole patterns were obtained for each response, where the red and blue colors represent the direction of magnetic field coming out of (source) and going into (sink) the skull. (A) Activity patterns of articulation (left) and articulation imagery (right). Two dipoles patterns were obtained bilaterally over frontal area for articulation, whereas one dipole was observed in articulation imagery task, where it located in left parietal area. (B) Topographies of hearing (left) and hearing imagery (right) responses. Typical auditory responses of two dipoles over bilateral temporal cortex were observed in hearing task. Similarly, bilateral temporal activations were also occurred in imagery hearing task. (C) Topography of response after articulation imagery. This response pattern is similar as the auditory response (immediate above).
Figure 10
Figure 10
Assessment of pattern similarity between overt and covert responses in Experiment 4. The angle measures were depicted against time in all plots, in which the red line and green shaded areas represent the mean and two SEM of between angle measures, whereas the yellow line and black shaded areas represent the mean and two SEM of within angle measures. The x-axis is centered at the peak latency of imagery responses (covert articulation, covert hearing and response after covert articulation in each plot). The results in all plots are 300 ms prior to and after the response latency. (A) Overt versus covert articulation. The between angle measures were smaller than the within angle measures across time course. (B) Overt versus covert hearing. The between angle measures approach the within angle measures only around the covert hearing response latency. (C) Hearing versus responses after covert articulation. The between angle measures approach the within angle measures only around the latency of responses after imagery articulation. The gray vertical shaded areas centered at time 0 represent the 20 ms time window used for statistical tests.

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