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TMS-based Assessment of Mental Training Effects on Motor Learning in Healthy Participants
Sponsor: Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France
Summary
The general purpose of this research project is to analyze the specific role of motor imagery on motor learning, assessed through corticospinal excitability measurements and behavioral data collection. This project is based on four sequences. For Sequence 1, the main objective is to examine the effect of mental training on movement speed and accuracy in a manual motor sequence task, as well as the influence of sensory feedback in immediate post-test (i.e., execution of a similar, but not identical, manual motor sequence, other manual tasks) on performance in delayed post-test. The secondary objective will be to examine corticospinal changes (i.e., amplitude of motor evoked potentials) induced by mental training, by measuring the amplitude of motor evoked potentials before and after mental training. For Sequence 2, the main objective is to examine the impact of a motor disturbance induced by a robotic arm at different intervals during the motor imagery process. The secondary objective will be to examine the corticospinal changes (i.e. amplitude of evoked motor potentials) induced by mental training as a function of the applied perturbations, before and after perturbation. For Sequence 3, the main objective will be to examine the influence of neuroplasticity on the quality of mental training. More specifically, the investigators will study the links between brain plasticity and motor learning through mental training. The secondary objective will be to examine the corticospinal changes (i.e. amplitude of evoked motor potentials) induced by mental training at different levels of the neuromuscular system (cortical, cervicomedullar, peripheral) after a training period. For Sequence 4, the main objective will be to examine the effect of short-term arm-immobilization of on the retention of motor learning induced by mental training. The secondary objective will be to examine the corticospinal changes (i.e., amplitude of motor evoked potentials) induced by of short-term arm-immobilization, or by transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), on motor learning. The results of this fundamental research project will allow a better understanding of neurophysiological and behavioral mechanisms that underlie motor learning through motor imagery. The results will allow to efficiently consider inter-individual specificities and will thus open up to clinical research perspectives, towards the establishment of adapted motor rehabilitation protocols.
Official title: Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation-based Assessment of Mental Training Effects on Motor Learning in Healthy Participants
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 60 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
556
Start Date
2024-04-08
Completion Date
2027-04-07
Last Updated
2025-01-03
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Transcranial magnetic stimulation
Magnetic stimulation of the cortex
Peripheral Nerve Stimulation
Electric stimulation of the nerves
Transcranial direct current stimulation
Electric stimulation of the cortex
Paired Associative Stimulation
Combined magnetic and electric stimulation of cortex and nerve, respectively
Wrist
Short-term immobilization of the arm
Robotic arm
External perturbation of force field induced by robotic arm
Cervicomedullar stimulation
Electric stimulation of the muscle
Physical training
Training to perform the task by actually doing the task
Mental training
Training to perform the task by imaging doing the task
Locations (1)
INSERM - U1093 Cognition, Action, and Sensorimotor Plasticity
Dijon, France