Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Radboud University Nijmegen , 6525 HR, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Centre for Vision Research, York University , Toronto, Ontario, M3J 1P3 Canada.
eNeuro. 2015 Jun 24;2(3). doi: 10.1523/ENEURO.0008-15.2015. eCollection 2015 May-Jun.
Reaching to a location in space is supported by a cortical network that operates in a variety of reference frames. Computational models and recent fMRI evidence suggest that this diversity originates from neuronal populations dynamically shifting between reference frames as a function of task demands and sensory modality. In this human fMRI study, we extend this framework to nonmanipulative grasping movements, an action that depends on multiple properties of a target, not only its spatial location. By presenting targets visually or somaesthetically, and by manipulating gaze direction, we investigate how information about a target is encoded in gaze- and body-centered reference frames in dorsomedial and dorsolateral grasping-related circuits. Data were analyzed using a novel multivariate approach that combines classification and cross-classification measures to explicitly aggregate evidence in favor of and against the presence of gaze- and body-centered reference frames. We used this approach to determine whether reference frames are differentially recruited depending on the availability of sensory information, and where in the cortical networks there is common coding across modalities. Only in the left anterior intraparietal sulcus (aIPS) was coding of the grasping target modality dependent: predominantly gaze-centered for visual targets and body-centered for somaesthetic targets. Left superior parieto-occipital cortex consistently coded targets for grasping in a gaze-centered reference frame. Left anterior precuneus and premotor areas operated in a modality-independent, body-centered frame. These findings reveal how dorsolateral grasping area aIPS could play a role in the transition between modality-independent gaze-centered spatial maps and body-centered motor areas.
空间定位依赖于一个在多种参考系中运作的皮质网络。计算模型和最近的 fMRI 证据表明,这种多样性源于神经元群体根据任务需求和感觉模态动态在参考系之间切换。在这项人类 fMRI 研究中,我们将该框架扩展到非操纵性抓握运动,这是一种依赖于目标多个属性的动作,不仅依赖于其空间位置。通过视觉或体感呈现目标,并操纵注视方向,我们研究了关于目标的信息如何在背侧内侧和背侧外侧与抓握相关的回路中以注视和身体为中心的参考系中编码。使用一种新的多变量方法对数据进行分析,该方法结合了分类和交叉分类措施,明确汇总了支持和反对注视和身体为中心的参考系存在的证据。我们使用这种方法来确定参考系是否根据感觉信息的可用性而有差异地招募,以及在皮质网络中,模态之间是否存在共同编码。只有在左侧前内顶叶皮层(aIPS)中,抓握目标模式的编码才依赖于:视觉目标主要是注视中心,体感目标是身体中心。左侧顶后上回皮层始终以注视中心的参考系对抓握目标进行编码。左侧前楔前叶和运动前区以模态独立的身体为中心的框架运作。这些发现揭示了背侧外侧抓握区域 aIPS 如何在模态独立的以注视为中心的空间图和身体为中心的运动区域之间的转换中发挥作用。