
pmid: 28978763
Using electroencephalography and electromyography recordings from healthy participants during a visual-depended bimanual coordination task, de Vries and colleagues showed that functional synchronization is important in motor coordination. The authors reported that higher coordination correlated positively with intermuscular synchrony, but correlated negatively with corticomuscular synchrony. They proposed that these two diverse motor systems operate differently depending on task demands. Similar experimental paradigms could identify motor mechanisms in patients with neurological disorders to design novel rehabilitation strategies.
Electromyography, Movement, Motor Cortex, Humans, Electroencephalography, Cortical Synchronization, Hand, Muscle, Skeletal
Electromyography, Movement, Motor Cortex, Humans, Electroencephalography, Cortical Synchronization, Hand, Muscle, Skeletal
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