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AbstractNeural oscillations are thought to play a central role in orchestrating activity states between distant neural populations. In humans, long-range neural connectivity has been particularly well characterised for 13-30 Hz beta activity which becomes phase coupled between the motor cortex and the contralateral muscle during isometric contraction. Based on this and related observations, beta activity and connectivity have been linked to sustaining stable cognitive and motor states – or the ‘status quo’ – in the brain. Recently, however, beta activity has been shown to be short-lived, as opposed to sustained – though so far this has been reported for regional beta activity in tasks without sustained motor demands. Here, we measured magnetoencephalography (MEG) and electromyography (EMG) in 18 human participants performing an isometric-contraction (gripping) task designed to yield sustained behavioural output. If cortico-muscular beta connectivity is directly responsible for sustaining a stable motor state, then beta activity should be (or become) sustained in this context. In contrast, we found that beta activity and connectivity with the downstream muscle were transient, even when participants engaged in sustained gripping. Moreover, we found that sustained motor requirements did not prolong beta-event duration in comparison to rest. These findings suggest that long-range neural synchronisation may entail short ‘bursts’ of frequency-specific connectivity, even when task demands – and behaviour – are sustained.HighlightsTrial-average 13-30 Hz beta activity and connectivity with the muscle appear sustained during stable motor behaviourSingle-trial beta activity and connectivity are short-lived, even when motor behaviour is sustainedSustained task demands do not prolong beta-event duration in comparison to resting state

Original publication

DOI

10.1101/2021.03.02.433514

Type

Journal article

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Publication Date

03/03/2021