Excitatory/inhibitory motor balance reflects individual differences
during joint action coordination.
Abstract
Joint action (JA) is a continuous process of motor co-regulation based
on the integration of contextual (top-down) and kinematic (bottom-up)
cues from partners. The fine equilibrium between excitation and
inhibition in sensorimotor circuits is, thus, central to such a dynamic
process of action selection and execution. In a bimanual task adapted to
become a unimanual JA task, the participant held a bottle (JA), while a
confederate had to reach and unscrew either that bottle or another
stabilized by a mechanical clamp (No_JA). Prior knowledge was
manipulated in each trial such that the participant knew (K) or not
(no_K) the target bottle in advance. Online transcranial magnetic
stimulation (TMS) was administered at action-relevant landmarks to
explore corticospinal excitability (CSE) and inhibition (cortical silent
period - cSP). CSE was modulated early on before the action started, if
prior information was available. In contrast, cSP modulation emerged
later during the reaching action, regardless of prior information. These
two indexes could thus reflect the concurrent elaboration of contextual
priors (top-down) and the online sampling of partner’s kinematic cues
(bottom-up). Furthermore, participants selected either one of two
possible behavioural strategies, preferring early or late force exertion
on the bottle. One translates into a reduced risk of motor coordination
failure and the other into reduced metabolic expenditure. Each strategy
was characterised by a specific excitatory/inhibitory profile. In
conclusion, the study of excitatory/inhibitory balance paves the way for
the neurophysiological determination of individual differences in the
combination of top-down and bottom-up processing during JA coordination.