Muscle Synergies Obtained from Comprehensive Mapping of the Cortical Forelimb Representation Using Stimulus Triggered Averaging of EMG Activity

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Issue Date
2018-10-10Author
Amundsen Huffmaster, Sommer L.
Van Acker III, Gustaf M.
Luchies, Carl W.
Cheney, Paul D.
Publisher
Society for Neuroscience
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Rights
Copyright © 2018 The Author(s). This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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Neuromuscular control of voluntary movement may be simplified using muscle synergies similar to those found using non-negative matrix factorization. We recently identified synergies in electromyography (EMG) recordings associated with both voluntary movement and movement evoked by high-frequency long-duration intracortical microstimulation applied to the forelimb representation of the primary motor cortex (M1). The goal of this study was to use stimulus-triggered averaging (StTA) of EMG activity to investigate the synergy profiles and weighting coefficients associated with poststimulus facilitation, as synergies may be hard-wired into elemental cortical output modules and revealed by StTA. We applied StTA at low (LOW, ∼15 μA) and high intensities (HIGH, ∼110 μA) to 247 cortical locations of the M1 forelimb region in two male rhesus macaques while recording the EMG of 24 forelimb muscles. Our results show that 10–11 synergies accounted for 90% of the variation in poststimulus EMG facilitation peaks from the LOW-intensity StTA dataset while only 4–5 synergies were needed for the HIGH-intensity dataset. Synergies were similar across monkeys and current intensities. Most synergy profiles strongly activated only one or two muscles; all joints were represented and most, but not all, joint directions of motion were represented. Cortical maps of the synergy weighting coefficients suggest only a weak organization. StTA of M1 resulted in highly diverse muscle activations, suggestive of the limiting condition of requiring a synergy for each muscle to account for the patterns observed.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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Citation
Sommer L. Amundsen Huffmaster, Gustaf M. Van Acker, Carl W. Luchies, Paul D. Cheney
Journal of Neuroscience 10 October 2018, 38 (41) 8759-8771; DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2519-17.2018
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