NeuroImage (Feb 2022)
Asymmetric directed functional connectivity within the frontoparietal motor network during motor imagery and execution
Abstract
Both imagery and execution of motor control consist of interactions within a neuronal network, including frontal motor-related and posterior parietal regions. To reveal neural representation in the frontoparietal motor network, two approaches have been proposed thus far: one is decoding of actions/modes related to motor control from the spatial pattern of brain activity; and the other is estimating directed functional connectivity (a directed association between two brain regions within motor areas). However, directed connectivity among multiple regions of the frontoparietal motor network during motor imagery (MI) or motor execution (ME) has not been investigated. Here, we attempted to characterize the directed functional connectivity representing the MI and ME conditions. We developed a delayed sequential movement and imagery task to evoke brain activity associated with ME and MI, which can be recorded by functional magnetic resonance imaging. We applied a causal discovery approach, a linear non-Gaussian acyclic causal model, to identify directed functional connectivity among the frontoparietal motor-related brain regions for each condition. We demonstrated higher directed functional connectivity from the contralateral dorsal premotor cortex (dPMC) to the primary motor cortex (M1) in ME than in MI. We further identified significant direct effects of the dPMC and ventral premotor cortex (vPMC) to the parietal regions. In particular, connectivity from the dPMC to the superior parietal lobule (SPL) in the same hemisphere showed significant positive effects across all conditions, while interlateral connectivities from the vPMC to the SPL showed significantly negative effects across all conditions. Finally, we found positive effects from A1 to M1, that is, the audio-motor pathway, in the same hemisphere. These results indicate that the sources of motor command originating in the d/vPMC influenced the M1 and parietal regions for achieving ME and MI. Additionally, sequential sounds may functionally facilitate temporal motor processes.