Brain mechanisms discriminating enactive mental simulations of running and plogging
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Philips, Roxane; Baeken, Chris; Billieux, Joel; Madog Harris, James; Maurage, Pierre; Muela Aguilera, Ismael; Tuğçe Öz, Irem; Pabst, Arthur; Sescousse, Guillaume; Vögele, Claus; Brevers, DamienEditorial
Wiley Online Library
Materia
action simulation brain imaging enactive cognition
Date
2024-08-26Referencia bibliográfica
Philips, R. et. al. Hum Brain Mapp. 2024;45:e26807. [https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.26807]
Sponsorship
Luxembourg National Research Fund (FNR); C18/BM/12552025 and PRIDE19/14233191/3E. P.M. (Senior Research Associate) is funded by the FRS-FNRS (Belgium); Queen Elisabeth Medical Foundation for Neurosciences, by an Applied Biomedical (TBM) grant of the Agency for Innovation through Science and Technology (IWT), part of the Research Foundation – Flanders (FWO) PrevenD Project 2.0 (T000720N) and FWO Project G011018NAbstract
Enactive cognition emphasizes co-constructive roles of humans and their environment
in shaping cognitive processes. It is specifically engaged in the mental simulation
of behaviors, enhancing the connection between perception and action. Here we
investigated the core network of brain regions involved in enactive cognition as
applied to mental simulations of physical exercise. We used a neuroimaging paradigm
in which participants (N = 103) were required to project themselves running or plogging
(running while picking-up litter) along an image-guided naturalistic trail. Using
both univariate and multivariate brain imaging analyses, we find that a broad spectrum
of brain activation discriminates between the mental simulation of plogging versus
running. Critically, we show that self-reported ratings of daily life running
engagement and the quality of mental simulation (how well participants were able to
imagine themselves running) modulate the brain reactivity to plogging versus running.
Finally, we undertook functional connectivity analyses centered on the insular cortex,
which is a key region in the dynamic interplay between neurocognitive processes.
This analysis revealed increased positive and negative patterns of insular-centered
functional connectivity in the plogging condition (as compared to the running condition),
thereby confirming the key role of the insular cortex in action simulation involving
complex sets of mental mechanisms. Taken together, the present findings provide new insights into the brain networks involved in the enactive mental simulation of
physical exercise.