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Book ChapterDOI

The Bereitschaftspotential: What Does It Measure and where Does It Come from?

Marjan Jahanshahi, +1 more
- pp 1-17
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TLDR
In the last decade, there has been a surge of interest in the BP with the demonstration that besides simple movement Parameters such as force and rate, higher order motor processes such as movement complexity and mode of movement selection affect its amplitude or slope.
Abstract
The Bereitschaftspotential (BP) is a negative cortical potential which develops beginning 1. 5 to 1 s prior to the onset of a self-paced movement (see Figure 1). The BP was first described by Kornhuber & Deecke in 1964, which makes it about 38 years old. Before the days that citation indices and impact factors came into vogue, one criterion for the significance of a research finding or paper was whether it led to other research studies. By this criterion, the BP has been incredibly influential. The BP has become a well-established tool in the motor physiology laboratory (Marsden et al, 1986), and from recent publications in scientific journals it is evident that the BP is also very much alive and well as a research tool. Its amplitude, slope, and/or latency have been shown to be impaired in neurological disorders such as Parkinson’s disease (Dick et al, 1989; Jahanshahi et al, 1995; Cunnington et al, 1995; Praamstra et al, 1996a), Huntington’s disease (Johnson et al, 2001), dystonia (Van der Kemp et al, 1995; Deuschl et al, 1995), cerebellar disease (Shibasaki et al, 1978; Verleger et al, 1999; Wessel et al, 1994), and psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia (eg Singh et al, 1992; Fuller et al, 1999; Northoff et al, 2000) and depression (Khanna et al, 1989; Haag et al, 1994) and in patients with focal lesions of the thalamus (Shibasaki, 1975; Green et al, 1999; Feve et al, 1996), basal ganglia (Feve et al, 1994; Kitamura et al, 1996) cerebellum (Shibasaki et al, 1978; Ikeda et al, 1994; Gerloff et al, 1996), prefrontal (Shibasaki, 1975; Singh & Knight, 1990; Honda et al, 1997) or parietal (Knight et al, 1989; Singh & Knight, 1993) cortices. In the last decade, there has been a surge of interest in the BP with the demonstration that besides simple movement Parameters such as force (Kutas & Donchin, 1980) and rate (Mackinnon et al, 1996) higher order motor processes such as movement complexity (Benecke et al, 1985; Simonetta et al, 1991) and mode of movement selection (Jahanshahi et al, 1995; Touge et al, 1995; Praamstra et al, 1996a; Dirnberger et al, 1998) affect its amplitude or slope.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond the FRN: Broadening the time-course of EEG and ERP components implicated in reward processing

TL;DR: This review comprehensively review reward-related ERPs, including the FRN, readiness potential or RP, stimulus-preceding negativity or SPN, contingent-negative variation or CNV, cue-related N2 and P3, Feedback-P3, and late-positive potential or LPP/slow-wave), and reward- related EEG time-frequency components (changes in power at alpha, beta, theta, and delta bands).
Journal ArticleDOI

Quiet eye and the Bereitschaftspotential: visuomotor mechanisms of expert motor performance

TL;DR: The results of this investigation lend support to the motor programming/preparation function of the QE period, with experts exhibiting a prolonged quiet eye period and greater cortical activation in the right-central region compared with non-experts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Movement-related potentials in Parkinson’s disease

TL;DR: A review of studies recording the Bereitschaftspotential, the Contingent Negative Variation, and the lateralized readiness potential in PD to highlight the contributions they have made to further understanding motor deficits in PD.
Journal ArticleDOI

'Catching the waves' - slow cortical potentials as moderator of voluntary action.

TL;DR: This hypothesis challenges the classic interpretation of the Libet experiment and suggests that slow cortical potentials are related to an urge to act but are not a neural indicator of the decision process of action initiation.
Journal ArticleDOI

How capable is non-invasive EEG data of predicting the next movement? A mini review.

TL;DR: This study shows that it is possible to develop BCIs based on the before-movement or motor imagery potentials such as the Bereitschaftspotential (BP) and correctly predict the onset of the upcoming movement, its direction and even the limb that is engaged in the performance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hirnpotentialänderungen bei Willkürbewegungen und passiven Bewegungen des Menschen: Bereitschaftspotential und reafferente Potentiale

TL;DR: A method of chronological data storage and reverse computation is described by which bio-electrical phenomena preceding “spontaneous” events within the nervous system can be analysed if these events appear repeatedly and are capable of triggering a computer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Event-related cortical desynchronization detected by power measurements of scalp EEG ☆

TL;DR: Changes in the background EEG activity occurring at the same time as visual and auditory evoked potentials, as well as during the interstimulus interval in a CNV paradigm were analysed in human subjects, using serial power measurements of overlapping EEG segments to identify desynchronization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Slow potentials of the cerebral cortex and behavior.

TL;DR: This review concentrates on scalp-recorded direct current potentials that appear as event-related potentials (ERPs) in humans that have been recorded on the scalp for the first time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-initiated versus externally triggered movements. I. An investigation using measurement of regional cerebral blood flow with PET and movement-related potentials in normal and Parkinson's disease subjects

TL;DR: During the self-initiated movements, the lower amplitude of the early BP in patients with Parkinson's disease as well as the underactivation of the supplementary motor area relative to normals support the premises that (i) the supplementaryMotor area contributes to the earlyBP, and (ii) the deficit in self- initiated movement is due to supplementary Motor area underactivation.
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