Boyd Lara A, Vidoni E D, Siengsukon C F, Wessel B D
Department of Physical Therapy, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Exp Brain Res. 2009 Apr;194(4):527-39. doi: 10.1007/s00221-009-1726-4. Epub 2009 Feb 13.
Fitts' law predicts that there is an essential trade-off between speed and accuracy during movement. Past investigations of Fitts' law have not characterized whether advance planning of upcoming fast and accurate movements impacts either behavior or patterns of brain activation. With an event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) paradigm, we investigated the neural correlates of advance planning and movement difficulty of rapid, goal-directed aimed movements using a discrete version of the classic Fitts' task. Our behavioral data revealed strong differences in response time, initial movement velocity, and end-point accuracy based on manipulation of both time to plan movements and response difficulty. We discovered a modulation of the neural network associated with executing the Fitts' task that was dependent on the availability of time to plan the upcoming movement and motor difficulty. Specifically, when time to plan for the upcoming movement was available, medial frontal gyrus (BA 10), pre-SMA (BA 6), putamen and cerebellar lobule VI were uniquely active to plan movements. Further, their activation correlated with behavioral measures of movement. In contrast, manipulating movement difficulty invoked a different pattern of brain activations in regions that are known to participate in motor control, including supplementary motor area (BA 6), sensory motor cortex (BA 4, 3, 2) and putamen. Our finding that medial frontal gyrus (BA 10) was important for discrete, fast and accurate movements expands the known role of this brain region, which in the past has been identified as a cognitive processing system supporting stimulus-oriented attending. We now extend this conceptualization to include motor functions such as those employed for processing for rapid, goal-directed aimed movements.
菲茨定律预测,在运动过程中速度和准确性之间存在着本质的权衡。过去对菲茨定律的研究尚未明确即将进行的快速且准确的运动的预先规划是否会影响行为或大脑激活模式。通过一项事件相关功能磁共振成像(fMRI)范式,我们使用经典菲茨任务的离散版本,研究了快速、目标导向的瞄准运动的预先规划和运动难度的神经关联。我们的行为数据显示,基于对运动规划时间和反应难度的操纵,反应时间、初始运动速度和终点准确性存在显著差异。我们发现,与执行菲茨任务相关的神经网络的调节取决于规划即将进行的运动的时间可用性和运动难度。具体而言,当有时间规划即将进行的运动时,内侧前额叶皮质(BA 10)、前辅助运动区(BA 6)、壳核和小脑小叶VI在规划运动时具有独特的激活。此外,它们的激活与运动的行为指标相关。相比之下,操纵运动难度会在已知参与运动控制的区域引发不同的大脑激活模式,包括辅助运动区(BA 6)、感觉运动皮层(BA 4、3、2)和壳核。我们发现内侧前额叶皮质(BA 10)对离散、快速且准确的运动很重要,这扩展了该脑区已知的作用,过去该脑区被认为是支持以刺激为导向的注意力的认知处理系统。我们现在将这一概念扩展到包括运动功能,如用于处理快速、目标导向的瞄准运动的功能。