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Neuronal responses in the human primary motor cortex coincide with the subjective onset of movement intention in brain-machine interface-mediated actions.

Title: Neuronal responses in the human primary motor cortex coincide with the subjective onset of movement intention in brain-machine interface-mediated actions.
Authors: Noel, J.P.; Bockbrader, M.; Bertoni, T.; Colachis, S.; Solca, M.; Orepic, P.; Ganzer, P.D.; Haggard, P.; Rezai, A.; Blanke, O.; Serino, A.
Publication Year: 2025
Collection: Université de Lausanne (UNIL): Serval - Serveur académique lausannois
Subject Terms: Humans; Brain-Computer Interfaces; Motor Cortex/physiology; Intention; Movement/physiology; Male; Adult; Female; Neurons/physiology; Electric Stimulation; Quadriplegia/physiopathology
Description: Self-initiated behavior is accompanied by the experience of intending our actions. Here, we leverage the unique opportunity to examine the full intentional chain-from intention to action to environmental effects-in a tetraplegic person outfitted with a primary motor cortex (M1) brain-machine interface (BMI) generating real hand movements via neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES). This combined BMI-NMES approach allowed us to selectively manipulate each element of the intentional chain (intention, action, effect) while probing subjective experience and performing extra-cellular recordings in human M1. Behaviorally, we reveal a novel form of intentional binding: motor intentions are reflected in a perceived temporal attraction between the onset of intentions and that of actions. Neurally, we demonstrate that evoked spiking activity in M1 largely coincides in time with the onset of the experience of intention and that M1 spike counts and the onset of subjective intention may co-vary on a trial-by-trial basis. Further, population-level dynamics, as indexed by a decoder instantiating movement, reflect intention-action temporal binding. The results fill a significant knowledge gap by relating human spiking activity in M1 with the onset of subjective intention and complement prior human intracranial work examining pre-motor and parietal areas.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
ISSN: 1545-7885
Relation: PLoS Biology; https://iris.unil.ch/handle/iris/270333; serval:BIB_3B8FD2F1BB9D; 001469352200005
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3003118
Availability: https://iris.unil.ch/handle/iris/270333; https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3003118
Accession Number: edsbas.87F0F4CE
Database: BASE