Rapid Compensation for Noisy Voluntary Movements in Adults with Primary Tic Disorders

Author:

Kurvits Lille12ORCID,Stenner Max‐Philipp3456ORCID,Guo Siqi2,Neumann Wolf‐Julian2ORCID,Haggard Patrick7,Ganos Christos28ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology University Medical Center Göttingen Göttingen Germany

2. Department of Neurology Charité University Hospital Berlin Germany

3. Department of Neurology University Hospital Magdeburg Magdeburg Germany

4. Department of Behavioral Neurology Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology Magdeburg Germany

5. Center for Behavioral Brain Sciences Magdeburg Germany

6. Center for Intervention and Research on Adaptive and Maladaptive Brain Circuits Underlying Mental Health Jena‐Magdeburg‐Halle Germany

7. Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience University College London London UK

8. Movement Disorder Clinic, Edmond J. Safra Program in Parkinson's Disease, Division of Neurology University of Toronto, Toronto Western Hospital Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundIt has been proposed that tics and premonitory urges in primary tic disorders (PTD), like Tourette syndrome, are a manifestation of sensorimotor noise. However, patients with tics show no obvious movement imprecision in everyday life. One reason could be that patients have strategies to compensate for noise that disrupts performance (ie, noise that is task‐relevant).ObjectivesOur goal was to unmask effects of elevated sensorimotor noise on the variability of voluntary movements in patients with PTD.MethodsWe tested 30 adult patients with PTD (23 male) and 30 matched controls in a reaching task designed to unmask latent noise. Subjects reached to targets whose shape allowed for variability either in movement direction or extent. This enabled us to decompose variability into task‐relevant versus less task‐relevant components, where the latter should be less affected by compensatory strategies than the former. In alternating blocks, the task‐relevant target dimension switched, allowing us to explore the temporal dynamics with which participants adjusted movement variability to changes in task demands.ResultsBoth groups accurately reached to targets, and adjusted movement precision based on target shape. However, when task‐relevant dimensions of the target changed, patients initially produced movements that were more variable than controls, before regaining precision after several reaches. This effect persisted across repeated changes in the task‐relevant dimension across the experiment, and therefore did not reflect an effect of novelty, or differences in learning.ConclusionsOur results suggest that patients with PTD generate noisier voluntary movements compared with controls, but rapidly compensate according to current task demands. © 2024 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.

Funder

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

European Commission

Publisher

Wiley

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