2018
DOI: 10.1523/jneurosci.1745-17.2018
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Active Braking of Whole-Arm Reaching Movements Provides Single-Trial Neuromuscular Measures of Movement Cancellation

Abstract: Movement inhibition is an aspect of executive control that can be studied using the countermanding paradigm, wherein subjects try to cancel an impending movement following presentation of a stop signal. This paradigm permits estimation of the stop-signal reaction time or the time needed to respond to the stop signal. Numerous countermanding studies have examined fast, ballistic movements, such as saccades, even though many movements in daily life are not ballistic and can be stopped at any point during their t… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(78 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
(33 reference statements)
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“…Remarkably, the actual stopping triggered by the stop-stimulus presentation appears to be very fast, at around 140 ms. This is in line with our findings of peripheral EMG decline at around 150 ms in different versions of SST (Atsma et al, 2018;Raud and Huster, 2017), as well as with studies showing the reduction of corticomotor excitability around this time. Nonetheless, it is earlier than expected from the conceptualization of response inhibition as a higher-order cognitive function (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Remarkably, the actual stopping triggered by the stop-stimulus presentation appears to be very fast, at around 140 ms. This is in line with our findings of peripheral EMG decline at around 150 ms in different versions of SST (Atsma et al, 2018;Raud and Huster, 2017), as well as with studies showing the reduction of corticomotor excitability around this time. Nonetheless, it is earlier than expected from the conceptualization of response inhibition as a higher-order cognitive function (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…These have been observed in a number of conflict tasks and are often considered erroneous response activations that are inhibited before they fully develop into an error (hence the previously used term 'partial error'; Burle et al, 2002;Hasbroucq et al, 1999;Rochet et al, 2014). In the SST, however, these bursts indicate correct response activation in reaction to the go signal that then gets cancelled in response to the stop signal (Atsma et al, 2018;De Jong et al, 1990;Raud and Huster, 2017). Correspondingly, while the onset latency of such EMG reflects response initiation, the starting point for its decline (quantified as the prEMG peak latency) may indicate the time-point of inhibitory effects in the periphery.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, most of these occur relatively late in the trial. The prEMG latencies in this study are consistent with recent findings showing that inhibition occurs around 140-180 ms after the stop signal (Raud and Huster, 2017;Atsma et al, 2018;Hannah et al, 2019;Huster et al, 2019;Jana et al, 2020;Raud et al, 2020;Thunberg et al, 2020). Beta power increases in the right inferior frontal gyrus and pre-supplementary motor area within 100 ms following the stop signal (Swann et al, 2009(Swann et al, , 2012.…”
Section: Eeg Signatures Of Response Inhibition and Motor Preparationsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Thus, CancelTime narrows the time window for the causal manipulation of neural structures involved in action-stopping. This is in contrast to previous studies that have proposed the onset of intramuscularly-recorded antagonist EMG responses (which is longer than SSRT), can be used as an alternative for estimating the stopping latency (Atsma et al, 2018;Corneil et al, 2013;Goonetilleke et al, 2012Goonetilleke et al, , 2010.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 65%