Near-infrared Spectroscopy and an Example of HAM Study;Brain Activation in the Development of Drawing Skills

  • Kobayashi, Harumi (Graduate School, Social Informatics, Tokyo Denki University) ;
  • Yasuda, Tetsuya (Graduate School, Social Informatics, Tokyo Denki University) ;
  • Suzuki, Satoshi (The 21st Century COE Project Office, Tokyo Denki University (TDU)) ;
  • Takase, Hiroki (The 21st Century COE Project Office, Tokyo Denki University (TDU))
  • 발행 : 2005.06.02

초록

Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) can be used to monitor brain activation by measuring changes in the concentration of oxy- and deoxy-hemoglobin (Hb) by their different spectra in the near-infrared range. Because NIRS is a noninvasive, highly flexible and portable device, it is very suitable to study brain activation when a human repeatedly performs a manipulative task, and possibly provides useful information to construct human adaptive mechatronics (HAM). There is some evidence that the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) plays a major role in working memory and it is proposed that the use of working memory decreases as a human develops manipulative skills. In the present study, we investigated the activation of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) of the brain in Brodmann's areas 9 and 46 in drawing tasks to examine whether NIRS can measure the changes of DLPFC activation as a human develops manipulative skills. Subjects performed a mirror image drawing task and a square drawing task by ones' left hands. In the mirror image task the subject drew following a star shape based on a mirror image of it, but square drawing did not involve mirror image and was estimated to be simpler. The changes of the concentration of oxy-Hb was higher in the mirror image drawing than the square drawing in most subjects. The changes of oxy-Hb decreased as the subject repeated the drawing task in most subjects. In conclusion, The activation of DLPFC measured by NIRS can reflect the brain activity in the development of manipulative skills.

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