Department of Psychology, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, UK.
Cerebellum. 2012 Jun;11(2):366-83. doi: 10.1007/s12311-011-0272-3.
Our growing understanding of how cerebral cortical areas communicate with the cerebellum in primates has enriched our understanding of the data that cerebellar circuits can access, and the neocortical areas that cerebellar activity can influence. The cerebellum is part of some large-scale networks involving several parts of the neocortex including association areas in the frontal lobe and the posterior parietal cortex that are known for their contributions to higher cognitive function. Understanding their connections with the cerebellum informs the debates around the role of the cerebellum in higher cognitive functions because they provide mechanisms through which association areas and the cerebellum can influence each others' operations. In recent years, evidence from connectional anatomy and human neuroimaging have comprehensively overturned the view that the cerebellum contributes only to motor control. The aim of this review is to examine our changing perspectives on the nature of cortico-cerebellar anatomy and the ways in which it continues to shape our views on its contributions to function. The review considers the anatomical connectivity of the cerebellar cortex with frontal lobe areas and the posterior parietal cortex. It will first focus on the anatomical organisation of these circuits in non-human primates before discussing new findings about this system in the human brain. It has been suggested that in non-human primates "although there is a modest input from medial prefrontal cortex, there is very little or none from the more lateral prefrontal areas" [33]. This review discusses anatomical investigations that challenge this claim. It also attempts to dispel the misconception that prefrontal projections to the cerebellum are from areas concerned only with the kinematic control of eye movements. Finally, I argue that our revised understanding of anatomy compels us to reconsider conventional views of how these systems operate in the human brain.
我们对灵长类动物大脑皮层区域与小脑如何相互交流的理解不断加深,这丰富了我们对小脑回路能够获取的数据以及小脑活动能够影响的新皮层区域的理解。小脑是一些大规模网络的一部分,这些网络涉及到包括额叶联合区和后顶叶皮层在内的新皮层的几个部分,这些区域因其对更高认知功能的贡献而闻名。了解它们与小脑的连接为小脑在更高认知功能中的作用提供了信息,因为它们提供了小脑和联合区可以相互影响操作的机制。近年来,连接解剖学和人类神经影像学的证据全面推翻了小脑仅有助于运动控制的观点。本综述的目的是考察我们对皮质-小脑解剖结构本质的不断变化的观点,以及它如何继续塑造我们对其对功能贡献的看法。该综述考察了小脑皮质与额叶区域和后顶叶皮层的解剖连接。它首先将重点放在非灵长类动物这些回路的解剖组织上,然后讨论关于人类大脑中这个系统的新发现。有人认为,在非灵长类动物中,“尽管有来自内侧前额叶皮质的适度输入,但来自更外侧前额叶区域的输入很少或没有”[33]。这篇综述讨论了挑战这一说法的解剖学研究。它还试图消除这样一种误解,即前额叶向小脑的投射来自仅与眼球运动运动学控制有关的区域。最后,我认为,我们对解剖学的理解的修正迫使我们重新考虑这些系统在人类大脑中运作的传统观点。