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Motor resonance in Parkinson's disease: Effects of observed actions on behaviour

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Motor resonance in Parkinson's disease: Effects of observed actions on behaviour. / Poliakoff, E.; Bek, J.; Vogt, S. et al.
In: Movement Disorders, Vol. 32, No. 6, 989, 06.2017.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineMeeting abstractpeer-review

Harvard

Poliakoff, E, Bek, J, Vogt, S, Crawford, T & Gowen, E 2017, 'Motor resonance in Parkinson's disease: Effects of observed actions on behaviour', Movement Disorders, vol. 32, no. 6, 989. https://doi.org/10.1002/mds.27087

APA

Poliakoff, E., Bek, J., Vogt, S., Crawford, T., & Gowen, E. (2017). Motor resonance in Parkinson's disease: Effects of observed actions on behaviour. Movement Disorders, 32(6), Article 989. https://doi.org/10.1002/mds.27087

Vancouver

Poliakoff E, Bek J, Vogt S, Crawford T, Gowen E. Motor resonance in Parkinson's disease: Effects of observed actions on behaviour. Movement Disorders. 2017 Jun;32(6):989. doi: 10.1002/mds.27087

Author

Poliakoff, E. ; Bek, J. ; Vogt, S. et al. / Motor resonance in Parkinson's disease : Effects of observed actions on behaviour. In: Movement Disorders. 2017 ; Vol. 32, No. 6.

Bibtex

@article{fa921a52a38c46ca9bb4121f580b0a44,
title = "Motor resonance in Parkinson's disease: Effects of observed actions on behaviour",
abstract = "Objective: To investigate whether people with Parkinson's disease (PD) exhibit motor resonance from observed human actions. Background: Seeing another person move can influence one's own movements, a process which is relevant for both learning and social interaction. This motor resonance can be measured in the laboratory using visuomotor priming; the participant's movement (e.g. finger press) is influenced by whether the observed movement is compatible (e.g. downward finger movement) or incompatible (e.g. upward finger movement). Visuomotor priming in PD has been examined in two previous studies, but imitative compatibility effects (specific to human movement) have not been separated from stimulus-response compatibility effects (general directional movement). Methods: 23 participants with mild to moderate PD (63.5 ± 6.5 years; Hoehn & Yahr stage 2.0 ± .71) and 24 healthy older adults (68.3 ± 5.4 years) completed a visuomotor priming task. Participants pressed a key with their left hand when they saw a go-signal preceded by a task-irrelevant compatible or incompatible moving finger or non-biological shape (rectangle). By rotating the observed movement such that a downward finger/shape movement moved rightward on the screen, imitative compatibility was pitted against general directional stimulus-response compatibility (Gowen et al. 2016). Results: Both groups demonstrated imitative compatibility effects from the observed finger movement and there were no between group differences. However, response times in the incompatible movement condition positivity correlated with disease severity (UPDRS motor scale) in the PD group. Conclusions: Both people with PD and healthy older people demonstrated imitative compatibility, showing intact motor resonance that cannot be attributed to general stimulus-response compatibility effects. This is particularly relevant for the use of action observation as a therapy to facilitate movement. The findings also have implications for understanding social cognitive difficulties in PD; in particular the correlation suggests that imitative control might decline with disease progression. Previously presented at the British Neuropsychological Society Meeting (October 2016).",
author = "E. Poliakoff and J. Bek and S. Vogt and T. Crawford and E. Gowen",
year = "2017",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1002/mds.27087",
language = "English",
volume = "32",
journal = "Movement Disorders",
issn = "0885-3185",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "6",
note = "21st International Congress of Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders ; Conference date: 04-06-2017 Through 08-06-2017",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Motor resonance in Parkinson's disease

T2 - 21st International Congress of Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders

AU - Poliakoff, E.

AU - Bek, J.

AU - Vogt, S.

AU - Crawford, T.

AU - Gowen, E.

PY - 2017/6

Y1 - 2017/6

N2 - Objective: To investigate whether people with Parkinson's disease (PD) exhibit motor resonance from observed human actions. Background: Seeing another person move can influence one's own movements, a process which is relevant for both learning and social interaction. This motor resonance can be measured in the laboratory using visuomotor priming; the participant's movement (e.g. finger press) is influenced by whether the observed movement is compatible (e.g. downward finger movement) or incompatible (e.g. upward finger movement). Visuomotor priming in PD has been examined in two previous studies, but imitative compatibility effects (specific to human movement) have not been separated from stimulus-response compatibility effects (general directional movement). Methods: 23 participants with mild to moderate PD (63.5 ± 6.5 years; Hoehn & Yahr stage 2.0 ± .71) and 24 healthy older adults (68.3 ± 5.4 years) completed a visuomotor priming task. Participants pressed a key with their left hand when they saw a go-signal preceded by a task-irrelevant compatible or incompatible moving finger or non-biological shape (rectangle). By rotating the observed movement such that a downward finger/shape movement moved rightward on the screen, imitative compatibility was pitted against general directional stimulus-response compatibility (Gowen et al. 2016). Results: Both groups demonstrated imitative compatibility effects from the observed finger movement and there were no between group differences. However, response times in the incompatible movement condition positivity correlated with disease severity (UPDRS motor scale) in the PD group. Conclusions: Both people with PD and healthy older people demonstrated imitative compatibility, showing intact motor resonance that cannot be attributed to general stimulus-response compatibility effects. This is particularly relevant for the use of action observation as a therapy to facilitate movement. The findings also have implications for understanding social cognitive difficulties in PD; in particular the correlation suggests that imitative control might decline with disease progression. Previously presented at the British Neuropsychological Society Meeting (October 2016).

AB - Objective: To investigate whether people with Parkinson's disease (PD) exhibit motor resonance from observed human actions. Background: Seeing another person move can influence one's own movements, a process which is relevant for both learning and social interaction. This motor resonance can be measured in the laboratory using visuomotor priming; the participant's movement (e.g. finger press) is influenced by whether the observed movement is compatible (e.g. downward finger movement) or incompatible (e.g. upward finger movement). Visuomotor priming in PD has been examined in two previous studies, but imitative compatibility effects (specific to human movement) have not been separated from stimulus-response compatibility effects (general directional movement). Methods: 23 participants with mild to moderate PD (63.5 ± 6.5 years; Hoehn & Yahr stage 2.0 ± .71) and 24 healthy older adults (68.3 ± 5.4 years) completed a visuomotor priming task. Participants pressed a key with their left hand when they saw a go-signal preceded by a task-irrelevant compatible or incompatible moving finger or non-biological shape (rectangle). By rotating the observed movement such that a downward finger/shape movement moved rightward on the screen, imitative compatibility was pitted against general directional stimulus-response compatibility (Gowen et al. 2016). Results: Both groups demonstrated imitative compatibility effects from the observed finger movement and there were no between group differences. However, response times in the incompatible movement condition positivity correlated with disease severity (UPDRS motor scale) in the PD group. Conclusions: Both people with PD and healthy older people demonstrated imitative compatibility, showing intact motor resonance that cannot be attributed to general stimulus-response compatibility effects. This is particularly relevant for the use of action observation as a therapy to facilitate movement. The findings also have implications for understanding social cognitive difficulties in PD; in particular the correlation suggests that imitative control might decline with disease progression. Previously presented at the British Neuropsychological Society Meeting (October 2016).

U2 - 10.1002/mds.27087

DO - 10.1002/mds.27087

M3 - Meeting abstract

VL - 32

JO - Movement Disorders

JF - Movement Disorders

SN - 0885-3185

IS - 6

M1 - 989

Y2 - 4 June 2017 through 8 June 2017

ER -