Motor imagery in unipolar major depression

Affiliation auteurs!!!! Error affiliation !!!!
TitreMotor imagery in unipolar major depression
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuteursBennabi D, Monnin J, Haffen E, Carvalho N, Vandel P, Pozzo T, Papaxanthis C
JournalFRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume8
Pagination413
Date PublishedDEC 4
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1662-5153
Mots-clésMajor depressive disorder, mental chronometry, motor imagery, movement speed, psychomotor retardation, speed/accuracy trade off
Résumé

Background: Motor imagery is a potential tool to investigate action representation, as it can provide insights into the processes of action planning and preparation. Recent studies suggest that depressed patients present specific impairment in mental rotation. The present study was designed to investigate the influence of unipolar depression on motor imagery ability. Methods: Fourteen right-handed patients meeting DSM-IV criteria for unipolar depression were compared to 14 matched healthy controls. Imagery ability was accessed by the timing correspondence between executed and imagined movements during a pointing task, involving strong spatiotemporal constraints (speed/accuracy trade-off paradigm). Results: Compared to controls, depressed patients showed marked motor slowing on both actual and imagined movements. Furthermore, we observed greater temporal discrepancies between actual and mental movements in depressed patients than in healthy controls. Lastly, depressed patients modulated, to some extent, mental movement durations according to the difficulty of the task, but this modulation was not as strong as that of healthy subjects. Conclusion:These results suggest that unipolar depression significantly affects the higher stages of action planning and point out a selective decline of motor prediction.

DOI10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00413