Periodic Reporting for period 1 - RESPVR (Investigating the sensorimotor mechanisms of respiration and their contribution to bodily self-consciousness by combining virtual reality, physiology, and neuroimaging.)
Berichtszeitraum: 2020-11-01 bis 2022-10-31
Study 2: Our novel paradigm - with limited movement - was combined and piloted with neuroimaging using a unique MRI-compatible VR system, offering the unprecedented opportunity to precisely identify the networks underlying breathing and its sense of agency, and their dynamics, using fMRI. A pilot of 17 subjects was first ran leading to interesting preliminary results. Previous behavioral results from Study 1 were reproduced, showing that sense of agency depends on the temporal delay of the visual feedback, and that motor adaptation depends on the temporal delay only when the subject self-attributes the movement. Our preliminary main result was that agency judgments were related to activations in the insula, the supramarginal gyrus, the middle frontal gyrus, the cingulate cortex, the inferior parietal lobule, the cerebellum, and the pre-central gyrus. Additionally, we observed that motor adaptation was linked to activations in the insula, the supramarginal gyrus, the pre-supplementary motor area, the cerebellum, and the precentral gyrus. These results resemble those obtained when investigating upper limb movements’ agency. This suggests that a similar process underlies upper limb movements ‘and breathing agency. Due to delays induced by the pandemic, the final sample (n=39) is still being analyzed.
Study 3: Following the validation of the paradigm and the determination of the behavioural and neural mechanisms in healthy subjects, we applied its behavioural version (Study 1) to patients suffering from HVS, to gain insights in HVS underlying mechanisms by comparing breathing motor adaptation and breathing agency in patients and age-matched healthy participants. We managed to recruit 14 HVS patients from the Pneumology ward of the Geneva Hospitals and recruited 14 perfectly matched control in terms of age and gender. Due to delays induced by the pandemic, the analyses are still ongoing.
Dissemination & Exploitation:
The strategy to disseminate was composed of two parts. (1) The results were disseminated within the LNCO, EPFL, and Campus Biotech during the events such as internal LNCO lab meetings and Project Presentation Seminars of Campus Biotech; (2) The results were also disseminated to the broad scientific community. Preliminary and results were presented in international research meetings such as meetings led by the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness (poster), the European Respiratory Society (poster and talk), and the Dyspnea Society (poster and talk). I also presented my data to my former laboratory at the Brighton and Sussex medical School (Brighton, UK) and was invited to give a talk as a keynote speaker in a symposium at the IEEE International Conference on Development and Learning 2022, in London.
Regarding publications, a comprehensive review on the topics of this project has been published in Biological psychology and a derived clinical application of this project is under review in European Respiratory Journal Open Research. Three more manuscripts remain under preparation and will be soon submitted. All original research manuscripts are/will be registered as pre-print on bioRxiv to ensure open science (https://www.biorxiv.org/(öffnet in neuem Fenster)). Finally, all my publications and conference talks were shared on my ResearchGate, Twitter, and LinkedIn profiles as well as on the LNCO website. The funding source, as well as the reference number of the grant, are specified in all publications.
Present findings were as a basis to write a grant proposal for the French ATIP Avenir CNRS/INSERM 2022 program. Such grant was selected by the jury.