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Increased prefrontal top-down control in older adults predicts motor performance and age-group association

Philipp Alexander Loehrer, Felix Sebastian Nettersheim, Carina R. Oehrn, Fabienne Homberg, Marc Tittgemeyer, Lars Timmermann, Immo Weber

2021NeuroImage15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bimanual motor control declines during ageing, affecting the ability of older adults to maintain independence. An important underlying factor is cortical atrophy, particularly affecting frontal and parietal areas in older adults. As these regions and their interplay are highly involved in bimanual motor preparation, we investigated age-related connectivity changes between prefrontal and premotor areas of young and older adults during the preparatory phase of complex bimanual movements using high-density electroencephalography. Generative modelling showed that excitatory inter-hemispheric prefrontal to premotor coupling in older adults predicted age-group affiliation and was associated with poor motor-performance. In contrast, excitatory intra-hemispheric prefrontal to premotor coupling enabled older adults to maintain motor-performance at the cost of lower movement speed. Our results disentangle the complex interplay in the prefrontal-premotor network during movement preparation underlying reduced bimanual control and the well-known speed-accuracy trade-off seen in older adults.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyPrefrontal cortexNeuroscienceMotor controlAssociation (psychology)Supplementary motor areaPremotor cortexPhysical medicine and rehabilitationDevelopmental psychologyCognitionFunctional magnetic resonance imagingMedicineAnatomyPsychotherapistDorsumMotor Control and AdaptationEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies