| Literature DB >> 29884245 |
Yuki Nishimura1,2, Yuki Ikeda3,4, Airi Suematsu3, Shigekazu Higuchi5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The human mirror neuron system exists in adults, and even in children. However, a significant, unanswered question in the literature concerns age differences in the effect of visual orientation of human body movements. The observation of actions performed by others is known to activate populations of neural cells called mirror neuron system. Moreover, the power of mu rhythms (8-13 Hz) in the EEG is known to decrease while performing and observing human movements. Therefore, the mu rhythm could be related to the activity of the mirror neuron system. This study investigated the effects of the visual perspective on electroencephalography responses to hand actions in two age groups.Entities:
Keywords: Association model; Growth and development; Mirror neuron system; Mu suppression
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29884245 PMCID: PMC5994135 DOI: 10.1186/s40101-018-0175-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Physiol Anthropol ISSN: 1880-6791 Impact factor: 2.867
Fig. 1Example of stimuli presented during the EEG recording. Initially, no hands were displayed in the video. After approximately 1 s, the hands appeared holding switches and operating them to turn on the lights. Left: In the egocentric condition, the hands appeared from the bottom of the screen so that the action was observed as the person’s own action. Right: In the allocentric condition, the spatial orientation was rotated by 180°
Fig. 2Sensor layout of the EEG cap used in the current study. Each dot represents one of 65 channels. Channels included in the four ROIs are circled
Fig. 3Grand-average mu and alpha event-related desynchronization recorded in children and adults. The darker line represents the ERD waveform for the egocentric condition, and the lighter line represents the waveform for the allocentric condition
Fig. 4Mean mu wave ERD difference over three ROIs between egocentric and allocentric conditions a for children and b for adults (LC, MC, and RC). The filled bar represents the egocentric condition, and the outlined bar represents the allocentric condition. Error bars show ± 1 standard errors. Significant differences from zero are indicated. †p < 0.1; *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01. It is assumed that brain activation is greater in regions where a stronger ERD is observed
Fig. 5Alpha wave ERD difference between conditions (egocentric and allocentric) a for children and b for adults over the mid-occipital (MO) region. The filled bar represents the egocentric condition, and the outlined bar represents the allocentric condition. The error bars display standard errors. Significant differences from zero are indicated. **p < 0.01