Combined low-frequency brain oscillatory activity and behavior predict future errors in human motor skill

Curr Biol. 2023 Aug 7;33(15):3145-3154.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.06.040. Epub 2023 Jul 12.

Abstract

Human skills are composed of sequences of individual actions performed with utmost precision. When occasional errors occur, they may have serious consequences, for example, when pilots are manually landing a plane. In such cases, the ability to predict an error before it occurs would clearly be advantageous. Here, we asked whether it is possible to predict future errors in a keyboard procedural human motor skill. We report that prolonged keypress transition times (KTTs), reflecting slower speed, and anomalous delta-band oscillatory activity in cingulate-entorhinal-precuneus brain regions precede upcoming errors in skill. Combined anomalous low-frequency activity and prolonged KTTs predicted up to 70% of future errors. Decoding strength (posterior probability of error) increased progressively approaching the errors. We conclude that it is possible to predict future individual errors in skill sequential performance.

Keywords: brain oscillatory activity; brain-computer interface; errors; memory; motor learning; skill.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Brain*
  • Gyrus Cinguli
  • Humans
  • Motor Skills*