Elsevier

Neuroscience Letters

Volume 558, 13 January 2014, Pages 164-168
Neuroscience Letters

Startle neural activity is additive with normal cortical initiation-related activation

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2013.11.009Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Subjects performed a simple reaction time (RT) task in response to an auditory cue.

  • A startling acoustic stimulus (SAS) was presented during the RT interval.

  • Results indicated that both voluntary and SAS initiation process jointly occur.

  • We argue that an additive model of initiation-related activation can explain the results.

Abstract

The current study examined the process of response initiation in a simple reaction time (RT) task using a startling acoustic stimulus (SAS), which has been shown to trigger a prepared movement through an involuntary initiation pathway. The SAS was presented within the RT interval (concurrent with, and 25, 50, 75, 100, and 125 ms following the “go” signal), with the observed response latency used to examine the relative contributions of voluntary and involuntary activation to response initiation. Our results clearly indicate that both voluntary and startle-related initiation activation jointly contribute to the observed RT. The data support a model in which startle-related neural activity is additive with voluntary cortical initiation-related activation. This result also provides indirect support for the hypothesis that both voluntary and SAS-related involuntary activation involve a similar process of response output.

Abbreviations

ECR
extensor carpi radialis
FCR
flexor carpi radialis
RT
reaction time
SAS
startling acoustic stimulus
SCM
sternocleidomastoid

Keywords

Additive model
Initiation
Motor preparation
Neural activation
Startle

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