Elevated representational similarity of voluntary action and inhibition in Tourette syndrome

Author:

Rae Charlotte L1ORCID,Raykov Petar1,Ambridge Eleanor M1,Colling Lincoln J1,Gould van Praag Cassandra D2,Bouyagoub Samira3,Polanski Liliana4,Larsson Dennis E O13ORCID,Critchley Hugo D35

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, University of Sussex , Brighton BN1 9QH , UK

2. Wellcome Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, University of Oxford , Oxford OX3 7JX , UK

3. Department of Neuroscience, Brighton & Sussex Medical School , Brighton BN1 9RY , UK

4. Center for Lifespan Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Human Development , Berlin 14195 , Germany

5. Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust , Worthing BN3 7HZ , UK

Abstract

Abstract Many people with Tourette syndrome are able to volitionally suppress tics, under certain circumstances. To understand better the neural mechanisms that underlie this ability, we used functional magnetic resonance neuroimaging to track regional brain activity during performance of an intentional inhibition task. On some trials, Tourette syndrome and comparison participants internally chose to make or withhold a motor action (a button press), while on other trials, they followed ‘Go’ and ‘NoGo’ instructions to make or withhold the same action. Using representational similarity analysis, a functional magnetic resonance neuroimaging multivariate pattern analysis technique, we assessed how Tourette syndrome and comparison participants differed in neural activity when choosing to make or to withhold an action, relative to externally cued responses on Go and NoGo trials. Analyses were pre-registered, and the data and code are publicly available. We considered similarity of action representations within regions implicated as critical to motor action release or inhibition and to symptom expression in Tourette syndrome, namely the pre-supplementary motor area, inferior frontal gyrus, insula, caudate nucleus and primary motor cortex. Strikingly, in the Tourette syndrome compared to the comparison group, neural activity within the pre-supplementary motor area displayed greater representational similarity across all action types. Within the pre-supplementary motor area, there was lower response-specific differentiation of activity relating to action and inhibition plans and to internally chosen and externally cued actions, implicating the region as a functional nexus in the symptomatology of Tourette syndrome. Correspondingly, patients with Tourette syndrome may experience volitional tic suppression as an effortful and tiring process because, at the top of the putative motor decision hierarchy, activity within the population of neurons facilitating action is overly similar to activity within the population of neurons promoting inhibition. However, not all pre-supplementary motor area group differences survived correction for multiple comparisons. Group differences in representational similarity were also present in the primary motor cortex. Here, representations of internally chosen and externally cued inhibition were more differentiated in the Tourette syndrome group than in the comparison group, potentially a consequence of a weaker voluntary capacity earlier in the motor hierarchy to suppress actions proactively. Tic severity and premonitory sensations correlated with primary motor cortex and caudate nucleus representational similarity, but these effects did not survive correction for multiple comparisons. In summary, more rigid pre-supplementary motor area neural coding across action categories may constitute a central feature of Tourette syndrome, which can account for patients’ experience of ‘unvoluntary’ tics and effortful tic suppression.

Funder

Dr. Mortimer and Theresa Sackler Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health

Reference53 articles.

1. The functional anatomy of Gilles de la Tourette syndrome;Ganos;Neurosci Biobehav Rev,2013

2. Tourette syndrome and consciousness of action;Cavanna;Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y),2013

3. Premonitory urges in Tourette’s syndrome;Leckman;Am J Psychiatry,1993

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