Department of Psychology and the Brain and Mind Institute, The University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada; Department of Neurobiology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA.
Department of Psychology and the Brain and Mind Institute, The University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada; School of Psychology and Public Health, La Trobe University, Bendigo Campus, Bendigo, VIC, Australia.
Cortex. 2017 Dec;97:202-220. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2016.07.005. Epub 2016 Jul 15.
Most object-directed limb movements can be carried out with a comfortable grasp posture. However, the orientation of an object relative to our bodies can sometimes lead us to select an uncomfortable or awkward grasp posture due to limitations imposed by the biomechanics of the arm. In a series of experiments, we identified a network of cortical areas that are engaged during the selection of movement strategies. Neurologically intact participants and two brain-damaged patients with overlapping lesions in the right posterior superior parietal lobule (pSPL) performed a grasp posture selection task in which biomechanical constraints were the primary consideration for selecting an action. The task induced states of bistable actions whereby the same stimulus gave rise to categorically different grasp postures. In a behavioral experiment, the two patients displayed a large range of manual bistability with the contralesional hand, resulting in a higher incidence of awkward grasping postures. In neurologically intact participants, a separate functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment revealed activation of a parieto-frontal network, which included the posterior intraparietal sulcus (pIPS) along the banks of the pSPL that was parametrically modulated by the degree of bistability in grasp posture selection. Superimposing this activation over the patients' structural MRIs revealed that the pIPS/pSPL activation in the neurologically intact participants overlapped with lesioned cortical tissue in both patients; all other areas of activation overlapped with intact cortical tissue in the patients. These results provide converging evidence that the posterior parietal cortex plays a critical role in selecting biomechanically appropriate postures during reach-to-grasp behaviors.
大多数针对物体的肢体运动都可以采用舒适的握持姿势完成。然而,由于手臂的生物力学限制,物体相对于我们身体的方向有时会导致我们选择不舒服或别扭的握持姿势。在一系列实验中,我们确定了一个在运动策略选择过程中被激活的皮质区域网络。神经功能完整的参与者和两名大脑损伤患者(损伤部位在后上方顶叶皮层的右侧有重叠)执行了一个握持姿势选择任务,该任务主要考虑生物力学约束来选择动作。任务诱导了双稳态动作状态,即相同的刺激会产生截然不同的握持姿势。在行为实验中,两名患者的对侧手表现出很大范围的手动双稳态,导致别扭握持姿势的发生率更高。在神经功能完整的参与者中,一个单独的功能磁共振成像(fMRI)实验揭示了顶叶-额叶网络的激活,该网络包括沿着后顶内沟(pIPS)的后顶叶旁回(pSPL),其参数由握持姿势选择的双稳态程度调制。将这种激活叠加在患者的结构磁共振成像上,结果表明,神经功能完整的参与者的 pIPS/pSPL 激活与两名患者的皮质损伤组织重叠;患者的其他所有激活区域与皮质完整组织重叠。这些结果提供了一致的证据,表明后顶叶皮层在伸手抓握行为中选择生物力学上合适的姿势方面起着关键作用。