Kermadi I, Liu Y, Rouiller E M
Institute of Physiology, University of Fribourg, Switzerland.
Somatosens Mot Res. 2000;17(3):255-71. doi: 10.1080/08990220050117619.
Single neuronal activity was recorded from the dorsal premotor cortex (PMd), the cingulate motor area (CMA) and the posterior parietal cortex (PPC) in two Macaca fascicularis trained to perform a delayed conditional sequence of coordinated pull and grasp movements. The monkey had to perform three types of trials instructed in a random manner: (i) bimanually, using the two hands in a coordinated sequence of movements; (ii) unimanually, using the left hand only; (iii) unimanually, using the right hand only. The aim of this study was first to assess the bilateral relationships of the three cortical areas for unimanual motor control. Second, to establish whether the three cortical areas contain units reflecting bimanual synergy. A total of 255 task-related neurons were recorded from the PMd, CMA and PPC, where most neurons exhibited a significant modulation of activity in both contralateral and ipsilateral unimanual trials (bilateral neurons: 85, 77 and 61%, respectively). Lower proportions of neurons in PMd (7%), CMA (16%) and PPC (6%) were active in unimanual contralateral trials, but not in unimanual ipsilateral trials. The reverse (modulation of activity in ipsilateral but not contralateral unimanual trials) represented 5% of neurons in PMd, 7% in CMA and 3% in PPC. When comparing unimanual and bimanual trials to search evidence for bimanual coordination, 57% of PMd task-related neurons were classified as bimanual, defined as units in which the activity observed in bimanual trials could not be predicted from that associated with unimanual trials when comparing the same events related to the same arm. The proportion of bimanual neurons in CMA (56%) was comparable to that found in PMd (55%), whereas PPC exhibited a higher proportion of bimanual neurons (74%). Furthermore, comparison of the present data with our previous results regarding the supplementary (SMA) and primary (M1) motor cortical areas shows that there is no statistically significant difference between PMd, CMA, SMA and M1 with respect to the proportions of bimanual neurons. Altogether, these results suggest that the five cortical areas PMd, CMA, PPC, SMA and M1 are participating to the control of sequential bimanually coordinated movements. Inter-limb coordination may thus be controlled by a widely distributed network including several cortical and sub-cortical areas.
在两只经过训练能执行延迟条件性协调拉和抓动作序列的食蟹猴中,记录了背侧运动前皮层(PMd)、扣带运动区(CMA)和后顶叶皮层(PPC)的单个神经元活动。猴子必须随机执行三种类型的试验:(i)双手同时进行,双手以协调的动作序列进行;(ii)单手进行,仅使用左手;(iii)单手进行,仅使用右手。本研究的目的首先是评估这三个皮层区域在单手运动控制方面的双侧关系。其次,确定这三个皮层区域是否包含反映双手协同作用的神经元。从PMd、CMA和PPC共记录了255个与任务相关的神经元,其中大多数神经元在对侧和同侧单手试验中均表现出显著的活动调制(双侧神经元分别为85%、77%和61%)。在PMd(7%)、CMA(16%)和PPC(6%)中,较低比例的神经元在单手对侧试验中活跃,但在单手同侧试验中不活跃。相反情况(在同侧单手试验而非对侧单手试验中有活动调制)在PMd中占神经元比例的5%,在CMA中为7%,在PPC中为3%。在比较单手和双手试验以寻找双手协调的证据时,57%的与PMd任务相关的神经元被归类为双手神经元,定义为在比较与同一只手臂相关的相同事件时,双手试验中观察到的活动无法从单手试验相关活动中预测的神经元。CMA中双手神经元的比例(56%)与PMd中发现的比例(55%)相当,而PPC中双手神经元的比例更高(74%)。此外,将本研究数据与我们之前关于辅助运动皮层(SMA)和初级运动皮层(M1)的结果进行比较表明,在双手神经元比例方面,PMd、CMA、SMA和M1之间没有统计学上的显著差异。总之,这些结果表明,PMd、CMA、PPC、SMA和M1这五个皮层区域参与了连续双手协调运动的控制。因此,肢体间协调可能由一个广泛分布的网络控制,该网络包括几个皮层和皮层下区域。