“…Most commonly, during TMS motor mapping one investigates motor evoked potentials (MEPs) using surface (Rossini et al, 2015) or needle EMG (Massé-Alarie, Bergin, Schneider, Schabrun, & Hodges, 2017). When MEPs from the stimulation of many cortical points are acquired, the resulting output is referred to as cortical muscle representation (MCR) (Bashir, Perez, Horvath, & Pascual-Leone, 2013;de Carvalho, Miranda, Luis, & Ducla-Soares, 1999), also known as TMS cortical motor map (Kraus & Gharabaghi, 2015;Novikov, Nazarova, & Nikulin, 2018). There are numerous studies showing that the MCR parameters such as excitability, size and topography reflect functionally relevant features of the motor cortex organization in healthy people (Beaulieu, Flamand, Massé-Alarie, & Schneider, 2017;Gentner & Classen, 2006;Nazarova, Novikov, Nikulin, & Ivanova, 2020;Tyč & Boyadjian, 2011) and in patients with motor pathology such as stroke (Lüdemann-Podubecká & Nowak, 2016;Yarossi et al, 2019), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Chervyakov et al, 2015;de Carvalho et al, 1999), dystonia (Schabrun, Stinear, Byblow, & Ridding, 2009) etc.…”