Contribution to a conference proceedings/Journal Article FZJ-2014-03069

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Functional resting-state connectivity of the human motor network: Differences between right- and left-handers

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2014
Thieme Stuttgart [u.a.]

58. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Klinische Neurophysiologie und Funktionelle Bildgebung (DGKN), BerlinBerlin, Germany, 19 Mar 2014 - 22 Mar 20142014-03-192014-03-22 Klinische Neurophysiologie 45(01), s-0034-1371279 () [10.1055/s-0034-1371279]

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Abstract: Background: Handedness, i.e., the preference to use one hand over the other, has been shown to be associated with differences in activation levels in various motor tasks performed with the dominant or non-dominant hand (Gilbert & Wysocki, 1992; White et al., 1994). We were interested whether also in the absence of an overt motor task, i.e., during “resting-state”, spontaneous fluctuations of primary motor cortex activity shows differential functional connectivity in the left or right hemisphere depending on whether subjects report left- or right-handedness.Methods: We, therefore, scanned 24 volunteers (12 right-handers and 12 left-handers) with resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI). Handedness was assessed by the Edinburgh-Handedness-Inventory (EHI) that ranges from -100 (strongly left-handed) to +100 (strongly right-handed). We computed two explorative whole-brain group analyses where the time course within a sphere of 8 mm-diameters centered on the M1 seed voxel (“hand knob” formation) was correlated with every other voxel in the brain. To test for differences in functional connectivity between right- and left-handers, we used M1 (left/right) as seed region to consider both the “dominant” (left) M1 of right-handers and the “dominant” (right) M1 of the left-handers. We, then, computed regression analyses including resting-state connectivity and EHI as covariates.Results: We found a positive correlation between EHI and resting-state functional connectivity of left M1 with the left supplementary motor area (SMA). That is, the stronger the M1-SMA functional connectivity within the left hemisphere during rest, the stronger the preference to use the right hand for manual skills (P< 0.05 FWE-corrected on the voxel-level). The reverse contrast did not yield significant voxels. Likewise, multiple regression analyses between EHI and resting-state connectivity of right M1 not reveal differences between right- and left-handers.Conclusion: Our results show that functional connectivity of the human motor cortex differs between right- and left-handers, even in the absence of overt motor performance. Right-handedness is predicted by a stronger functional connectivity between left SMA and left M1. An intrinsically higher connectivity of the dominant motor cortex with premotor areas in right-handers might explain the behavioural notion that right-handedness is usually strongly lateralised while left-handers are more flexible in also using their non-dominant hand in activities of daily living.

Classification:

Contributing Institute(s):
  1. Kognitive Neurowissenschaften (INM-3)
  2. Strukturelle und funktionelle Organisation des Gehirns (INM-1)
Research Program(s):
  1. 333 - Pathophysiological Mechanisms of Neurological and Psychiatric Diseases (POF2-333) (POF2-333)
  2. 89572 - (Dys-)function and Plasticity (POF2-89572) (POF2-89572)

Appears in the scientific report 2014
Database coverage:
Current Contents - Clinical Medicine ; JCR ; NationallizenzNationallizenz ; SCOPUS ; Science Citation Index Expanded ; Thomson Reuters Master Journal List ; Web of Science Core Collection
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Document types > Events > Contributions to a conference proceedings
Document types > Articles > Journal Article
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Institute Collections > INM > INM-1
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 Record created 2014-05-08, last modified 2021-01-29



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