Cholinergic-related pupil activity reflects level of emotionality during motor performance
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Vidal, Marc; Onderdijk, Kelsey E.; Aguilera Del Pino, Ana María; Six, Joren; Maes, Pieter-Jan; Fritz, Thomas Hans; Leman, MarcEditorial
Wiley
Materia
emotional motor control functional data generalised arousal
Fecha
2023-04-28Referencia bibliográfica
Vidal, M., Onderdijk, K. E., Aguilera, A. M., Six, J., Maes, P.-J., Fritz, T. H., & Leman, M. (2024). Cholinergic-related pupil activity reflects level of emotionality during motor performance. European Journal of Neuroscience, 59(9), 2193–2207. https://doi.org/10. 1111/ejn.15998
Patrocinador
Flemish Government, Methusalem funding; FWO project, Grant/Award Number: G046518N; Consejería de Conocimiento, Investigación y Universidad, Junta de Andalucía (Spain), Grant/Award Number: A-FQM- 66-UGR20; Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, Grant/Award Number: PID2020-113961GB-I00; IMAG-Maria de Maeztu, Grant/Award Number: CEX2020-001105-M/ AEI/10.13039/501100011033Resumen
Pupil size covaries with the diffusion rate of the cholinergic and noradrenergic
neurons throughout the brain, which are essential to arousal. Recent findings
suggest that slow pupil fluctuations during locomotion are an index of
sustained activity in cholinergic axons, whereas phasic dilations are related to
the activity of noradrenergic axons. Here, we investigated movement
induced arousal (i.e., by singing and swaying to music), hypothesising that
actively engaging in musical behaviour will provoke stronger emotional
engagement in participants and lead to different qualitative patterns of tonic
and phasic pupil activity. A challenge in the analysis of pupil data is the turbulent
behaviour of pupil diameter due to exogenous ocular activity commonly
encountered during motor tasks and the high variability typically found
between individuals. To address this, we developed an algorithm that adaptively
estimates and removes pupil responses to ocular events, as well as a
functional data methodology, derived from Pfaffs’ generalised arousal, that
provides a new statistical dimension on how pupil data can be interpreted
according to putative neuromodulatory signalling. We found that actively
engaging in singing enhanced slow cholinergic-related pupil dilations and having
the opportunity to move your body while performing amplified the effect
of singing on pupil activity. Phasic pupil oscillations during motor execution
attenuated in time, which is often interpreted as a measure of sense of agency
over movement.





