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Breathing is coupled with voluntary action and the cortical readiness potential

Psychology

Breathing is coupled with voluntary action and the cortical readiness potential

H. Park, C. Barnoud, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Hyeong-Dong Park and colleagues delves into the intriguing relationship between voluntary action and respiration. Their findings suggest that self-initiated movements are more frequent during expiration, with neural activity fluctuations tied to breathing. Discover how these insights could reshape our understanding of self-consciousness and the readiness potential.... show more
Abstract
Voluntary action is a fundamental element of self-consciousness. The readiness potential (RP), a slow drift of neural activity preceding self-initiated movement, has been suggested to reflect neural processes underlying the preparation of voluntary action; yet more than fifty years after its introduction, interpretation of the RP remains controversial. Based on previous research showing that internal bodily signals affect sensory processing and ongoing neural activity, we here investigated the potential role of interoceptive signals in voluntary action and the RP. We report that (1) participants initiate voluntary actions more frequently during expiration, (2) this respiration-action coupling is absent during externally triggered actions, and (3) the RP amplitude is modulated depending on the respiratory phase. Our findings demonstrate that voluntary action is coupled with the respiratory system and further suggest that the RP is associated with fluctuations of ongoing neural activity that are driven by the involuntary and cyclic motor act of breathing.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Feb 06, 2020
Authors
Hyeong-Dong Park, Coline Barnoud, Henri Trang, Oliver A. Kannape, Karl Schaller, Olaf Blanke
Tags
voluntary action
self-consciousness
readiness potential
respiration
neural activity
interoceptive signals
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