Spatiotemporal Propagation of Sensorimotor Beta Bursts Across Adulthood

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Abstract

Beta activity (13–30 Hz) is a prominent feature of motor control, widely distributed across the cerebral cortex. However, how beta bursts (transient high-amplitude events) propagate along cortical organizational axes, such as the posterior-anterior gradient that coordinates cortical structure and function from sensory to association regions, remains poorly understood. Using magnetoencephalography (MEG) data from the Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience (CamCAN) dataset, beta burst propagation was characterized using burst onset timing and optical flow analysis during motor tasks and rest in 573 participants (ages 18-88). Beta bursts propagated systematically along the posterior-anterior cortical axis during motor tasks, with propagation direction reversing between movement phases and exhibiting hemispheric asymmetry. In contrast, the resting state exhibited no consistent spatial organization of beta burst propagation. Propagation patterns in motor tasks significantly correlated with cortical distributions of GABA A , cholinergic, and mu-opioid receptors in a hemisphere-specific and phase-dependent manner. Propagation energy was highest in sensorimotor regions and decreased towards more peripheral areas of the cortex. Older adults exhibited significant temporal expansion of beta activity (earlier pre-movement, later post-movement), suggesting a mediation effect of age on reaction time. These results suggest that the propagation of beta bursts is influenced by cortical architecture and may provide a mechanistic explanation for the age-related slowing of motor function.

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