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    Preparatory suppression and facilitation of voluntary and involuntary responses to loud acoustic stimuli in an anticipatory timing task

    91315.pdf (10.72Mb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Nguyen, An
    Jacobs, L.A.
    Tresilian, J.R.
    Lipp, Ottmar
    Marinovic, Welber
    Date
    2021
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Nguyen, A.T. and Jacobs, L.A. and Tresilian, J.R. and Lipp, O.V. and Marinovic, W. 2021. Preparatory suppression and facilitation of voluntary and involuntary responses to loud acoustic stimuli in an anticipatory timing task. Psychophysiology. 58 (2).
    Source Title
    Psychophysiology
    DOI
    10.1111/psyp.13730
    ISSN
    0048-5772
    Faculty
    Faculty of Health Sciences
    School
    Curtin School of Population Health
    Funding and Sponsorship
    http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP180100394
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/91491
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    In this study, we sought to characterize the effects of intense sensory stimulation on voluntary and involuntary behaviors at different stages of preparation for an anticipated action. We presented unexpected loud acoustic stimuli (LAS) at-rest and at three critical times during active movement preparation (−1,192, −392, and 0 ms relative to expected voluntary movement onset) to probe the state of the nervous system, and measured their effect on voluntary and involuntary motor actions (finger-press and eye-blink startle reflex, respectively). Voluntary responses were facilitated by LAS presented during active preparation, leading to earlier and more forceful responses compared to control and LAS at-rest. Notably, voluntary responses were significantly facilitated on trials where the LAS was presented early during preparation (−1,192 ms). Eye-blink reflexes to the LAS at −392 ms were significantly reduced and delayed compared to blinks elicited at other time-points, indicating suppression of sub-cortical excitability. However, voluntary responses on these trials were still facilitated by the LAS. The results provide insight into the mechanisms involved in preparing anticipatory actions. Induced activation can persist in the nervous system and can modulate subsequent actions for a longer time-period than previously thought, highlighting that movement preparation is a continuously evolving process that is susceptible to external influence throughout the preparation period. Suppression of sub-cortical excitability shortly before movement onset is consistent with previous work showing corticospinal suppression which may be a necessary step before the execution of any voluntary response.

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