Indovina I, Sanes J N
Laboratory of Functional Neuroimaging, Fondazione Santa Lucia IRCCS, via Ardeatina 306, 10079 Rome, Italy.
Neuroimage. 2001 Jun;13(6 Pt 1):1027-34. doi: 10.1006/nimg.2001.0776.
We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine the representation pattern for repetitive voluntary finger movements in the primary motor cortex (M1) and the supplementary motor area (SMA) of humans. Healthy right-handed participants performed repetitive individuated flexion-extension movements of digits 1, 2, and 3 using the dominant hand. Contralateral functional labeling for the group indicated a largely overlapping activation pattern in M1 and SMA for the three digits. Consistent with recent findings, the geographic activation center in M1 for each finger differed, and we found some evidence of a homunculus organization pattern in M1 and SMA, but only for the central location of the representations. However, the statistical power for the homunculus pattern was weak, and the distance separating the digit geographical centers was typically less than 15% of the entire extent of digit representations in M1 or SMA. While separations for digit representations occurred, the entire data set provided more support for the concept of distributed, overlapping representations than for a classic homunculus organization for voluntary finger movements.
我们使用功能磁共振成像来研究人类初级运动皮层(M1)和辅助运动区(SMA)中重复性随意手指运动的表征模式。健康的右利手参与者用优势手进行手指1、2和3的重复性个体化屈伸运动。该组的对侧功能标记表明,M1和SMA中三个手指的激活模式在很大程度上重叠。与最近的研究结果一致,M1中每个手指的地理激活中心不同,并且我们在M1和SMA中发现了一些侏儒组织模式的证据,但仅针对表征的中心位置。然而,侏儒模式的统计效力较弱,并且分隔手指地理中心的距离通常小于M1或SMA中手指表征整个范围的15%。虽然出现了手指表征的分隔,但整个数据集为随意手指运动的分布式、重叠表征概念提供的支持比对经典侏儒组织的支持更多。