Title: EEG correlates of haptic feedback in a visuomotor tracking task
Authors: Lin, Chun-Ling
Shaw, Fu-Zen
Young, Kuu-Young
Lin, Chin-Teng
Jung, Tzyy-Ping
電控工程研究所
Institute of Electrical and Control Engineering
Keywords: Visuomotor tracking task;Electroencephalogram (EEG);Haptic feedback;Independent component analysis (ICA);Time-frequency analysis;Event-related coherence (ERCOH)
Issue Date: 1-May-2012
Abstract: This study investigates the temporal brain dynamics associated with haptic feedback in a visuomotor tracking task. Haptic feedback with deviation-related forces was used throughout tracking experiments in which subjects' behavioral responses and electroencephalogram (EEG) data were simultaneously measured. Independent component analysis was employed to decompose the acquired EEG signals into temporally independent time courses arising from distinct brain sources. Clustering analysis was used to extract independent components that were comparable across participants. The resultant independent brain processes were further analyzed via time-frequency analysis (event-related spectral perturbation) and event-related coherence (ERCOH) to contrast brain activity during tracking experiments with or without haptic feedback. Across subjects, in epochs with haptic feedback, components with equivalent dipoles in or near the right motor region exhibited greater alpha band power suppression. Components with equivalent dipoles in or near the left frontal, central, left motor, right motor, and parietal regions exhibited greater beta-band power suppression, while components with equivalent dipoles in or near the left frontal, left motor, and right motor regions showed greater gamma-band power suppression relative to non-haptic conditions. In contrast, the right occipital component cluster exhibited less beta-band power suppression in epochs with haptic feedback compared to non-haptic conditions. The results of ERCOH analysis of the six component clusters showed that there were significant increases in coherence between different brain networks in response to haptic feedback relative to the coherence observed when haptic feedback was not present. The results of this study provide novel insight into the effects of haptic feedback on the brain and may aid the development of new tools to facilitate the learning of motor skills. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11536/16002
ISSN: 1053-8119
Journal: NEUROIMAGE
Volume: 60
Issue: 4
End Page: 2258
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