ORCID Profile
0000-0002-0917-8548
Current Organisations
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
,
VU University Amsterdam
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Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 16-11-2006
DOI: 10.1007/S00221-006-0713-2
Abstract: To elucidate the neural interactions underlying bimanual coordination, we investigated in 11 participants the bilateral coupling of homologous muscles in an isometric force production task involving fatiguing elbow flexion and extension. We focused on changes in motor unit (MU) synchronization as evident in EMG recordings of relevant muscles. In contrast to a related study on leg muscles, the arm muscles did not exhibit MU synchronization around 16 Hz, consistent with our hypothesis that 16 Hz MU synchronization is linked to balance maintenance. As expected, bilateral MU synchronization was apparent between 8 and 12 Hz and increased with fatigue and more strongly so for extensor than for flexor muscles. MU synchronization in that frequency band is interpreted in terms of common bilateral input and substantiates the idea that common input is functionally organized. Since these findings are consistent with the literature on mirror movements, they suggest that both phenomena may be related.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 09-2006
DOI: 10.1016/J.BRAINRES.2006.06.039
Abstract: To gain insight into the brain activity associated with the performance of an acoustically paced synchronization task, we analyzed the litude and phase dynamics inherent in magnetoencephalographic (MEG) signals across frequency bands in order to discriminate between evoked and induced responses. MEG signals were averaged with respect to motor and auditory events (tap and tone onsets). Principal component analysis was used to compare litude and phase changes during listening and during paced and unpaced tapping, allowing a separation of brain activity related to motor and auditory processes, respectively. Motor performance was accompanied by phasic litude changes and increased phase locking in the beta band. Auditory processing of acoustic stimuli resulted in a simultaneous increase of litude and phase locking in the theta and alpha band. The temporal overlap of auditory-related litude changes and phase locking indicated an evoked response, in accordance with previous studies on auditory perception. The temporal difference of movement-related litude and phase dynamics in the beta band, on the other hand, suggested a change in ongoing brain activity, i.e., an induced response supporting previous results on motor-related brain dynamics in the beta band.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 15-05-2012
DOI: 10.1111/J.1460-9568.2012.08122.X
Abstract: Unilateral movement is usually accompanied by ipsilateral activity in the primary motor cortex (M1). It is still largely unclear whether this activity reflects interhemispheric 'cross-talk' of contralateral M1 that facilitates movement, or results from processes that inhibit motor output. We investigated the role of beta power in ipsilateral M1 during unimanual force production. Significant ipsilateral beta desynchronization occurred during continuous dynamic but not during static force production. Moreover, event-related time-frequency analysis revealed bilateral desynchronization patterns, whereas post-movement synchronization was confined to the contralateral hemisphere. Our findings indicate that ipsilateral activation is not merely the result of interhemispheric cross-talk but involves additional processes. Given observations of differential blood oxygen level-dependent responses in ipsilateral and contralateral M1, and the correlation between beta desynchronization and the firing rate of pyramidal tract neurons in contralateral M1 during movement, we speculate that beta desynchronization in contra- and ipsilateral M1 arises from distinct neural activation patterns.
Publisher: American Physiological Society
Date: 10-2008
Abstract: The effects of low doses of alcohol on neural synchronization in muscular activity were investigated in ten participants during quiet standing with eyes open or closed. We focused on changes in common input to bilateral motor unit pools as evident in surface electromyographic (EMG) recordings of lower leg extensor and flexor muscles. The extensor muscles exhibited bilateral synchronization in two distinct frequency bands (i.e., 0–5 and 10–15 Hz), whereas synchronization between flexor muscles was minimal. As expected, alcohol ingestion affected postural sway, yielding increased sway at higher blood-alcohol levels. Whereas vision affected bilateral synchronization only at 0–5 Hz, alcohol ingestion resulted in a progressive decrease of synchronization at 10–15 Hz between the EMG activities of the extensor muscles. The decrease in common bilateral input is most likely related to reduced reticulospinal activity with alcohol ingestion.
Publisher: Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Date: 08-07-2016
Publisher: Frontiers Media SA
Date: 2012
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 11-2005
DOI: 10.1016/J.NEULET.2005.06.045
Abstract: The influence of sleep deprivation (SD) on event-related fields and the distribution of power over the scalp of MEG imaged brain activity was studied during acoustically paced rhythmic force production. At the behavioral level, SD resulted in a reduction of the lag (negative asynchrony) between produced forces and acoustic stimuli at higher movement tempos. Principal component analysis of the accompanying MEG activity showed that auditory- and motor-evoked fields were attenuated after SD and revealed an anterior shift of power towards more frontal channels. These results were interpreted in terms of a change of central processing of afferent sensory input due to SD.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 10-2008
DOI: 10.1016/J.JELEKIN.2007.03.005
Abstract: Two experiments were conducted to examine effects of muscle fatigue on motor-unit synchronization of quadriceps muscles (rectus femoris, vastus medialis, vastus lateralis) within and between legs. We expected muscle fatigue to result in an increased common drive to different motor units of synergists within a leg and, hence, to increased synchronization, i.e., an increased coherence between corresponding surface EMGs. We further expected fatigue-related motor overflow to cause motor-unit synchronization of homologous muscles of both legs, although to a lesser extent than for synergists within a leg. In the first experiment, different levels of fatigue were induced by varying posture (knee angle), whereas in the second experiment fatigue was induced in a fixed posture by instructing participants to produce different force levels. EMG coherence was found in two distinct frequency bands (6-11 and 13-18 Hz) and was higher within a leg than between legs. The fatigue-related increase of 6-11 Hz inter-limb synchronization resembled the increased motor overflow during unimanual contractions and thus hinted at an increase in bilateral coupling. Synchronization at 13-18 Hz was clearly different and appeared to be related to posture.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 07-2004
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 02-2009
DOI: 10.1111/J.1460-9568.2008.06584.X
Abstract: To handle the rich repertoire of behavioural goals, the CNS has to control the many degrees of freedom of the musculoskeletal system in a flexible manner. This problem can be drastically simplified if muscle synergies serve as the to-be-controlled building blocks of motor performance, instead of the in idual degrees of freedom. Muscle synergies have been identified as coherent activation patterns of a group of muscles in space or time, but the neural mechanisms underlying their formation remain largely unknown. Here we evaluated the hypothesis that synergies are reflected in common input to different contributing muscles, and investigated modulations in motor unit (MU) synchronization of homologous muscles during a rhythmic balance task. If common input is related to muscle synergies, the resultant MU synchronization should not be static but task dependent and, in the present context, vary in time. Coherence between surface electromyographic signals of bilateral leg muscles revealed MU synchronization in two distinct frequency bands. MU synchronization was not constant but modulated within a movement cycle, and its time course resembled the activation patterns of the muscles. These results are congruent with a linkage between MU synchronization and muscle synergies, and suggest that MU synchronization provides an expedient method for studying synergy-related neural mechanisms.
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 08-03-2007
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 06-2007
DOI: 10.1016/J.NEUROIMAGE.2007.03.012
Abstract: Although the relationship between brain activity and motor performance is reasonably well established, the manner in which this relationship changes with motor learning remains incompletely understood. This paper presents a study of cortical modulations of event-related beta activity when participants learned to perform a complex bimanual motor task: 151 channel MEG data were acquired from nine healthy adults whilst learning a bimanual 3:5 polyrhythm. Sources of MEG activity were determined by means of synthetic aperture magnetometry that yielded locations and time courses of beta activities. The relationship between changes in performance and corresponding changes in event-related power were assessed using partial least squares. Behavioral data revealed that participants successfully learned to perform the 3:5 polyrhythm and that performance improvement was mainly achieved through the proper timing of the finger producing the slow rhythm. We found event-related modulation of beta power in the contralateral motor cortex that was inversely related to force output. The degree of beta modulation increased during the experiment - although the force level remained constant - and was positively correlated with motor performance, in particular for the motor cortex contralateral to the slow hand. These electrophysiological findings support the view that activity in motor cortex co-varies closely with behavioral changes over the course of learning.
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Date: 30-08-2019
DOI: 10.1080/14763141.2019.1650102
Abstract: The aim of the study was to investigate whether jerk cost (JC) can discriminate between swimming levels. Nine elite and nine non-elite swimmers swam a 50-m front-crawl sprint wearing a 3D accelerometer on their back between the inferior angles of the scapulae. Lap times and JC were calculated from the acceleration signal and compared between groups and between swimmers within a group. The elite swimmers swam significantly faster lap times than the non-elite swimmers (p < 0.001). They did so with significantly lower levels of JC compared to the non-elite swimmers (p = 0.005). Furthermore, a stepwise multiple linear regression showed JC accounted for 32.9% of the variation in lap time of the elite swimmers. These results indicate that it is possible to discriminate elite from non-elite swimmers using JC: elite swimmers swim with lower JCs than non-elite swimmers. Additionally, swimming at higher speed is associated with more accelerations and decelerations in both elite and non-elite swimmers, which is reflected by higher JCs and lower smoothness. In sum, JC provides an index of swimming technique that is easy to use in training practice.
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 02-02-2016
No related grants have been discovered for Peter Beek.