Department of Medicine and Surgery, University of Parma, Via Volturno 39, Parma 43125, Italy.
Department of Medicine and Surgery, University of Parma, Via Volturno 39, Parma 43125, Italy.
Neuroimage. 2021 Nov;243:118511. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118511. Epub 2021 Aug 24.
During execution and observation of reaching-grasping actions, the brain must encode, at the same time, the final action goal and the type of grip necessary to achieve it. Recently, it has been proposed that the Mirror Neuron System (MNS) is involved not only in coding the final goal of the observed action, but also the type of grip used to grasp the object. However, the specific contribution of the different areas of the MNS, at both cortical and subcortical level, in disentangling action goal and grip type is still unclear. Here, twenty human volunteers participated in an fMRI study in which they performed two tasks: (a) observation of four different types of actions, consisting in reaching-to-grasp a box handle with two possible grips (precision, hook) and two possible goals (open, close); (b) action execution, in which participants performed grasping actions similar to those presented during the observation task. A conjunction analysis revealed the presence of shared activated voxels for both action observation and execution within several cortical areas including dorsal and ventral premotor cortex, inferior and superior parietal cortex, intraparietal sulcus, primary somatosensory cortex, and cerebellar lobules VI and VIII. ROI analyses showed a main effect for grip type in several premotor and parietal areas and cerebellar lobule VI, with higher BOLD activation during observation of precision vs hook actions. A grip x goal interaction was also present in the left inferior parietal cortex, with higher BOLD activity during precision-to-close actions. A multivariate pattern analysis (MVPA) revealed a significant accuracy for the grip model in all ROIs, while for the action goal model, significant accuracy was observed only for left inferior parietal cortex ROI. These findings indicate that a large network involving cortical and cerebellar areas is involved in the processing of type of grip, while final action goal appears to be mainly processed within the inferior parietal region, suggesting a differential contribution of the areas activated in this study.
在执行和观察伸手抓握动作时,大脑必须同时对最终动作目标和实现该目标所需的抓握类型进行编码。最近有人提出,镜像神经元系统(MNS)不仅参与了对观察到的动作的最终目标的编码,还参与了用于抓住物体的抓握类型的编码。然而,MNS 的不同区域(包括皮质和皮质下水平)在区分动作目标和抓握类型方面的具体贡献仍不清楚。在这里,二十名人类志愿者参与了一项 fMRI 研究,在该研究中,他们执行了两项任务:(a)观察四种不同类型的动作,包括用两种可能的抓握方式(精确抓握、钩状抓握)和两种可能的目标(打开、关闭)伸手抓握一个盒子把手;(b)执行抓握动作,参与者执行与观察任务中呈现的动作相似的抓握动作。联合分析显示,在几个皮质区域内,包括背侧和腹侧运动前皮质、下顶叶和上顶叶、顶内沟、初级体感皮质和小脑 VI 和 VIII 叶,都存在用于动作观察和执行的共享激活体素。ROI 分析显示,在几个运动前和顶叶区域以及小脑 VI 叶中存在抓握类型的主效应,在观察精确抓握与钩状抓握动作时,BOLD 激活更高。在左顶下小叶中也存在抓握 x 目标的相互作用,在进行精确到关闭的动作时,BOLD 活性更高。多元模式分析(MVPA)显示,在所有 ROI 中,抓握模型的准确性都很高,而对于动作目标模型,仅在左顶下小叶 ROI 中观察到显著的准确性。这些发现表明,涉及皮质和小脑区域的大型网络参与了抓握类型的处理,而最终的动作目标似乎主要在顶下小叶区域内处理,这表明在这项研究中激活的区域的贡献存在差异。