Unexpected Terrain Induced Changes in Cortical Activity in Bipedal-Walking Rats

Honghao Liu, Bo Li, Minjian Zhang, Chuankai Dai, Pengcheng Xi, Yafei Liu, Qiang Huang, Jiping He, Yiran Lang*, Rongyu Tang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Humans and other animals can quickly respond to unexpected terrains during walking, but little is known about the cortical dynamics in this process. To study the impact of unexpected terrains on brain activity, we allowed rats with blocked vision to walk on a treadmill in a bipedal posture and then walk on an uneven area at a random position on the treadmill belt. Whole brain EEG signals and hind limb kinematics of bipedal-walking rats were recorded. After encountering unexpected terrain, the θ band power of the bilateral M1, the γ band power of the left S1, and the θ to γ band power of the RSP significantly decreased compared with normal walking. Furthermore, when the rats left uneven terrain, the β band power of the bilateral M1 and the α band power of the right M1 decreased, while the γ band power of the left M1 significantly increased compared with normal walking. Compared with the flat terrain, the θ to low β (3–20 Hz) band power of the bilateral S1 increased after the rats contacted the uneven terrain and then decreased in the single-or double-support phase. These results support the hypothesis that unexpected terrains induced changes in cortical activity.

Original languageEnglish
Article number36
JournalBiology
Volume11
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2022

Keywords

  • Bipedal-walking rats
  • EEG
  • Kinematics
  • Treadmill
  • Unexpected terrains

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