Battaglia-Mayer Alexandra, Caminiti Roberto, Lacquaniti Francesco, Zago Myrka
Dipartimento di Fisiologia umana e Farmacologia, Università di Roma La Sapienza, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, 00185 Rome, Italy.
Cereb Cortex. 2003 Oct;13(10):1009-22. doi: 10.1093/cercor/13.10.1009.
In daily life, hand and eye movements occur in different contexts. Hand movements can be made to a visual target shortly after its presentation, or after a longer delay; alternatively, they can be made to a memorized target location. In both instances, the hand can move in a visually structured scene under normal illumination, which allows visual monitoring of its trajectory, or in darkness. Across these conditions, movement can be directed to points in space already foveated, or to extrafoveal ones, thus requiring different forms of eye-hand coordination. The ability to adapt to these different contexts by providing successful answers to their demands probably resides in the high degree of flexibility of the operations that govern cognitive visuomotor behavior. The neurophysiological substrates of these processes include, among others, the context-dependent nature of neural activity, and a transitory, or task-dependent, affiliation of neurons to the assemblies underlying different forms of sensorimotor behavior. Moreover, the ability to make independent or combined eye and hand movements in the appropriate order and time sequence must reside in a process that encodes retinal-, eye- and hand-related inputs in a spatially congruent fashion. This process, in fact, requires exact knowledge of where the eye and the hand are at any given time, although we have no or little conscious experience of where they stay at any instant. How this information is reflected in the activity of cortical neurons remains a central question to understanding the mechanisms underlying the planning of eye-hand movement in the cerebral cortex. In the last 10 years, psychophysical analyses in humans, as well as neurophysiological studies in monkeys, have provided new insights on the mechanisms of different forms of oculo-manual actions. These studies have also offered preliminary hints as to the cortical substrates of eye-hand coordination. In this review, we will highlight some of the results obtained as well as some of the questions raised, focusing on the role of eye- and hand-tuning signals in cortical neural activity. This choice rests on the crucial role this information exerts in the specification of movement, and coordinate transformation.
在日常生活中,手部和眼部运动发生在不同的情境中。视觉目标呈现后不久,或者经过较长延迟后,手部都可以朝着该目标移动;或者,手部也可以朝着记忆中的目标位置移动。在这两种情况下,手部既可以在正常光照下的视觉结构化场景中移动,这样就能视觉监测其轨迹,也可以在黑暗中移动。在这些条件下,运动可以指向已经中央凹注视过的空间点,也可以指向中央凹外的点,因此需要不同形式的眼手协调。通过成功满足这些需求来适应这些不同情境的能力,可能在于支配认知视觉运动行为的操作具有高度灵活性。这些过程的神经生理基础包括神经活动的情境依赖性,以及神经元与不同形式感觉运动行为背后的神经集合的短暂或任务依赖性联系。此外,以适当的顺序和时间序列进行独立或联合的眼部和手部运动的能力,必定存在于一个以空间一致的方式对视网膜、眼睛和手部相关输入进行编码的过程中。事实上,这个过程需要确切知道眼睛和手部在任何给定时间的位置,尽管我们对它们在任何时刻的位置没有或只有很少的有意识体验。这种信息如何在皮层神经元的活动中得到体现,仍然是理解大脑皮层中眼手运动规划机制的核心问题。在过去的十年里,人类的心理物理学分析以及猴子的神经生理学研究,为不同形式的眼手动作机制提供了新的见解。这些研究也对手眼协调的皮层基础提供了初步线索。在这篇综述中,我们将重点介绍一些已获得的结果以及提出的一些问题,重点关注眼动和手动调谐信号在皮层神经活动中的作用。这种选择基于这些信息在运动规范和坐标转换中所发挥的关键作用。