Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience (May 2023)

Testing EEG functional connectivity between sensorimotor and face processing visual regions in individuals with congenital facial palsy

  • Thomas Quettier,
  • Thomas Quettier,
  • Antonio Maffei,
  • Antonio Maffei,
  • Filippo Gambarota,
  • Filippo Gambarota,
  • Pier Francesco Ferrari,
  • Paola Sessa,
  • Paola Sessa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnsys.2023.1123221
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17

Abstract

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Moebius syndrome (MBS) is characterized by the congenital absence or underdevelopment of cranial nerves VII and VI, leading to facial palsy and impaired lateral eye movements. As a result, MBS individuals cannot produce facial expressions and did not develop motor programs for facial expressions. In the latest model of sensorimotor simulation, an iterative communication between somatosensory, motor/premotor cortices, and visual regions has been proposed, which should allow more efficient discriminations among subtle facial expressions. Accordingly, individuals with congenital facial motor disability, specifically with MBS, should exhibit atypical communication within this network. Here, we aimed to test this facet of the sensorimotor simulation models. We estimated the functional connectivity between the visual cortices for face processing and the sensorimotor cortices in healthy and MBS individuals. To this aim, we studied the strength of beta band functional connectivity between these two systems using high-density EEG, combined with a change detection task with facial expressions (and a control condition involving non-face stimuli). The results supported our hypothesis such that when discriminating subtle facial expressions, participants affected by congenital facial palsy (compared to healthy controls) showed reduced connectivity strength between sensorimotor regions and visual regions for face processing. This effect was absent for the condition with non-face stimuli. These findings support sensorimotor simulation models and the communication between sensorimotor and visual areas during subtle facial expression processing.

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