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Motor imagery increases imitation of hand movements in Parkinson's disease

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Motor imagery increases imitation of hand movements in Parkinson's disease. / Bek, J.; Gowen, E.; Vogt, Stefan et al.
In: Movement Disorders, Vol. 32, No. Suppl. 2, 992, 06.2017.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineMeeting abstractpeer-review

Harvard

Bek, J, Gowen, E, Vogt, S, Crawford, T & Poliakoff, E 2017, 'Motor imagery increases imitation of hand movements in Parkinson's disease', Movement Disorders, vol. 32, no. Suppl. 2, 992. https://doi.org/10.1002/mds.27087

APA

Bek, J., Gowen, E., Vogt, S., Crawford, T., & Poliakoff, E. (2017). Motor imagery increases imitation of hand movements in Parkinson's disease. Movement Disorders, 32(Suppl. 2), Article 992. https://doi.org/10.1002/mds.27087

Vancouver

Bek J, Gowen E, Vogt S, Crawford T, Poliakoff E. Motor imagery increases imitation of hand movements in Parkinson's disease. Movement Disorders. 2017 Jun;32(Suppl. 2):992. doi: 10.1002/mds.27087

Author

Bek, J. ; Gowen, E. ; Vogt, Stefan et al. / Motor imagery increases imitation of hand movements in Parkinson's disease. In: Movement Disorders. 2017 ; Vol. 32, No. Suppl. 2.

Bibtex

@article{d625996e0f1e40dea7bf920cca18bca9,
title = "Motor imagery increases imitation of hand movements in Parkinson's disease",
abstract = "Objective: This study investigated the effects of action observation and motor imagery on movement amplitude in people with Parkinson's disease. Background: Action observation (AO) influences movement and learning via activation of neural structures involved in action execution. Although some positive effects of AO and imitation have been reported in PD, findings are inconsistent. Combining AO with motor imagery (MI) increases behavioural and neural effects in healthy individuals[1] but this has not been explored in PD. Methods: Participants with mild to moderate PD (n = 24) and healthy older adults (n = 24) observed and imitated videos showing a human hand moving in either an elevated or a non-elevated path between target positions (Fig. 1). Movement kinematics were recorded and imitation was measured in terms of modulation of amplitude for elevated vs. non-elevated videos. After an initial set of imitation trials (AO), further instructions were given to promote the use of MI, emphasizing kinaesthetic elements of imagery (imagined sensations). A second set of trials was then completed (AO+MI). Participants reported their use of MI in each part of the task. Results: Both groups modulated the amplitude of their hand movements in response to elevated vs. non-elevated videos (p < .001), and this was greater following MI instructions (time * elevation; p = .005), demonstrating increased imitation (Fig. 2). However, modulation was larger overall in the control group, and correlated positively with kinaesthetic MI ratings in controls but not in the PD group. This suggests that people with PD may engage different mechanisms during MI, consistent with previous research indicating an increased reliance on visual processes[2]. Conclusions: People with PD are able to imitate the amplitude of simple hand movements, and imitation is increased when action observation is combined with motor imagery. Our results parallel findings from healthy young participants and indicate that combined AO+MI is a promising approach to motor facilitation in PD. Further research is needed to elucidate mechanisms of AO and MI in PD and to explore therapeutic effects.",
author = "J. Bek and E. Gowen and Stefan Vogt and T. Crawford and E. Poliakoff",
year = "2017",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1002/mds.27087",
language = "English",
volume = "32",
journal = "Movement Disorders",
issn = "0885-3185",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "Suppl. 2",
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 imagery increases imitation of hand movements in Parkinson's disease

AU - Bek, J.

AU - Gowen, E.

AU - Vogt, Stefan

AU - Crawford, T.

AU - Poliakoff, E.

PY - 2017/6

Y1 - 2017/6

N2 - Objective: This study investigated the effects of action observation and motor imagery on movement amplitude in people with Parkinson's disease. Background: Action observation (AO) influences movement and learning via activation of neural structures involved in action execution. Although some positive effects of AO and imitation have been reported in PD, findings are inconsistent. Combining AO with motor imagery (MI) increases behavioural and neural effects in healthy individuals[1] but this has not been explored in PD. Methods: Participants with mild to moderate PD (n = 24) and healthy older adults (n = 24) observed and imitated videos showing a human hand moving in either an elevated or a non-elevated path between target positions (Fig. 1). Movement kinematics were recorded and imitation was measured in terms of modulation of amplitude for elevated vs. non-elevated videos. After an initial set of imitation trials (AO), further instructions were given to promote the use of MI, emphasizing kinaesthetic elements of imagery (imagined sensations). A second set of trials was then completed (AO+MI). Participants reported their use of MI in each part of the task. Results: Both groups modulated the amplitude of their hand movements in response to elevated vs. non-elevated videos (p < .001), and this was greater following MI instructions (time * elevation; p = .005), demonstrating increased imitation (Fig. 2). However, modulation was larger overall in the control group, and correlated positively with kinaesthetic MI ratings in controls but not in the PD group. This suggests that people with PD may engage different mechanisms during MI, consistent with previous research indicating an increased reliance on visual processes[2]. Conclusions: People with PD are able to imitate the amplitude of simple hand movements, and imitation is increased when action observation is combined with motor imagery. Our results parallel findings from healthy young participants and indicate that combined AO+MI is a promising approach to motor facilitation in PD. Further research is needed to elucidate mechanisms of AO and MI in PD and to explore therapeutic effects.

AB - Objective: This study investigated the effects of action observation and motor imagery on movement amplitude in people with Parkinson's disease. Background: Action observation (AO) influences movement and learning via activation of neural structures involved in action execution. Although some positive effects of AO and imitation have been reported in PD, findings are inconsistent. Combining AO with motor imagery (MI) increases behavioural and neural effects in healthy individuals[1] but this has not been explored in PD. Methods: Participants with mild to moderate PD (n = 24) and healthy older adults (n = 24) observed and imitated videos showing a human hand moving in either an elevated or a non-elevated path between target positions (Fig. 1). Movement kinematics were recorded and imitation was measured in terms of modulation of amplitude for elevated vs. non-elevated videos. After an initial set of imitation trials (AO), further instructions were given to promote the use of MI, emphasizing kinaesthetic elements of imagery (imagined sensations). A second set of trials was then completed (AO+MI). Participants reported their use of MI in each part of the task. Results: Both groups modulated the amplitude of their hand movements in response to elevated vs. non-elevated videos (p < .001), and this was greater following MI instructions (time * elevation; p = .005), demonstrating increased imitation (Fig. 2). However, modulation was larger overall in the control group, and correlated positively with kinaesthetic MI ratings in controls but not in the PD group. This suggests that people with PD may engage different mechanisms during MI, consistent with previous research indicating an increased reliance on visual processes[2]. Conclusions: People with PD are able to imitate the amplitude of simple hand movements, and imitation is increased when action observation is combined with motor imagery. Our results parallel findings from healthy young participants and indicate that combined AO+MI is a promising approach to motor facilitation in PD. Further research is needed to elucidate mechanisms of AO and MI in PD and to explore therapeutic effects.

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 - Suppl. 2

M1 - 992

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

Y2 - 4 June 2017 through 8 June 2017

ER -