4.7 Article

High Working Memory Load Increases Intracortical Inhibition in Primary Motor Cortex and Diminishes the Motor Affordance Effect

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 36, Issue 20, Pages 5544-5555

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0284-16.2016

Keywords

EEG; GABA; inhibition; motor affordance; working memory

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health Grant [DA026452]
  2. James S. McDonnel Scholar Award [220020375]
  3. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship

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Motor affordances occur when the visual properties of an object elicit behaviorally relevant motor representations. Typically, motor affordances only produce subtle effects on response time or on motor activity indexed by neuroimaging/neuroelectrophysiology, but sometimes they can trigger action itself. This is apparent in utilization behavior, where individuals with frontal cortex damage inappropriately grasp affording objects. This raises the possibility that, in healthy-functioning individuals, frontal cortex helps ensure that irrelevant affordance provocations remain below the threshold for actual movement. In Experiment 1, we tested this frontal control hypothesis by loading the frontal cortex with an effortful working memory (WM) task (which ostensibly consumes frontal resources) and examined whether this increased EEG measures of motor affordances to irrelevant affording objects. Under low WM load, there were typical motor affordance signatures: an event-related desynchronization in the mu frequency and an increased P300 amplitude for affording (vs nonaffording) objects over centroparietal electrodes. Contrary to our prediction, however, these affordance measures were diminished under high WM load. In Experiment 2, we tested competing mechanisms responsible for the diminished affordance in Experiment 1. We used paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation over primary motor cortex to measure long-interval cortical inhibition. We found greater long-interval cortical inhibition for high versus low load both before and after the affording object, suggesting that a tonic inhibition state in primary motor cortex could prevent the affordance from provoking the motor system. Overall, our results suggest that a high WM load sets the motor system into a suppressed state that mitigates motor affordances.

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