Petit Laurent, Beauchamp Michael S
Groupe d'Imagerie Neurofonctionnelle, Unité Mixte de Recherche6095, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique-Commissariat à la Energie Atomique-Université de Caen et Université Paris 5, Centre Cyceron, Caen, France.
J Neurophysiol. 2003 May;89(5):2516-27. doi: 10.1152/jn.00988.2002. Epub 2003 Jan 29.
We used event-related fMRI to measure brain activity while subjects performed saccadic eye, head, and gaze movements to visually presented targets. Two distinct patterns of response were observed. One set of areas was equally active during eye, head, and gaze movements and consisted of the superior and inferior subdivisions of the frontal eye fields, the supplementary eye field, the intraparietal sulcus, the precuneus, area MT in the lateral occipital sulcus and subcortically in basal ganglia, thalamus, and the superior colliculus. These areas have been previously observed in functional imaging studies of human eye movements, suggesting that a common set of brain areas subserves both oculomotor and head movement control in humans, consistent with data from single-unit recording and microstimulation studies in nonhuman primates that have described overlapping eye- and head-movement representations in oculomotor control areas. A second set of areas was active during head and gaze movements but not during eye movements. This set of areas included the posterior part of the planum temporale and the cortex at the temporoparietal junction, known as the parieto-insular vestibular cortex (PIVC). Activity in PIVC has been observed during imaging studies of invasive vestibular stimulation, and we confirm its role in processing the vestibular cues accompanying natural head movements. Our findings demonstrate that fMRI can be used to study the neural basis of head movements and show that areas that control eye movements also control head movements. In addition, we provide the first evidence for brain activity associated with vestibular input produced by natural head movements as opposed to invasive caloric or galvanic vestibular stimulation.
我们使用事件相关功能磁共振成像(fMRI)来测量受试者在对视觉呈现的目标进行眼球跳动、头部和注视运动时的大脑活动。观察到两种不同的反应模式。一组区域在眼球、头部和注视运动期间均表现出同等程度的活跃,包括额眼区的上下亚区、辅助眼区、顶内沟、楔前叶、枕外侧沟中的MT区以及基底神经节、丘脑和上丘等皮质下区域。这些区域先前已在人类眼球运动的功能成像研究中被观察到,这表明一组共同的脑区在人类中既服务于眼球运动控制,也服务于头部运动控制,这与非人灵长类动物的单神经元记录和微刺激研究数据一致,这些研究描述了眼球运动控制区域中重叠的眼球和头部运动表征。另一组区域在头部和注视运动期间活跃,但在眼球运动期间不活跃。这组区域包括颞平面后部和颞顶交界处的皮质,即顶岛前庭皮质(PIVC)。在侵入性前庭刺激的成像研究中已观察到PIVC的活动,并且我们证实了其在处理伴随自然头部运动的前庭线索中的作用。我们的研究结果表明,fMRI可用于研究头部运动的神经基础,并表明控制眼球运动的区域也控制头部运动。此外,我们提供了首个证据,证明与自然头部运动产生的前庭输入相关的大脑活动,而非侵入性的冷热或电刺激前庭刺激。