Dopaminergic manipulations affect the modulation and meta-modulation of movement speed: Evidence from two pharmacological interventions

Lydia J. Hickman*, Sophie L. Sowden-Carvalho, Dagmar S. Fraser, Bianca A. Schuster, Alicia J. Rybicki, Joseph M. Galea, Jennifer L. Cook

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

A body of research implicates dopamine in the average speed of simple movements. However, naturalistic movements span a range of different shaped trajectories and rarely proceed at a single constant speed. Instead, speed is reduced when drawing “corners” compared to “straights” (i.e., speed modulation), and the extent of this slowing down is dependent upon the global shape of the movement trajectory (i.e., speed meta-modulation) – for example whether the shape is an ellipse or a rounded square. At present, it is not known how (or whether) dopaminergic function controls continuous changes in speed during movement execution. The current paper reports effects on these kinematic features of movement following two forms of dopamine manipulation: Study One highlights movement differences in individuals with PD both ON and OFF their dopaminergic medication (N = 32); Study Two highlights movement differences in individuals from the general population on haloperidol (a dopamine receptor blocker, or “antagonist”) and placebo (N = 43). Evidence is presented implicating dopamine in speed, speed modulation and speed meta-modulation, whereby low dopamine conditions are associated with reductions in these variables. These findings move beyond vigour models implicating dopamine in average movement speed, and towards a conceptualisation that involves the modulation of speed as a function of contextual information.
Original languageEnglish
Article number115213
Number of pages13
JournalBehavioural Brain Research
Volume474
Early online date23 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Oct 2024

Keywords

  • Dopamine
  • Movement
  • Speed
  • Speed modulation
  • Speed meta-modulation

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