Department of Neuroscience and Physiology and NYU Neuroscience Institute, New York University Grossman School of Medicine Public Health Research Institute, New York, New York.
Department of Rehabilitation and Human Performance, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York.
J Neurophysiol. 2022 Apr 1;127(4):1007-1025. doi: 10.1152/jn.00374.2021. Epub 2022 Mar 16.
Bimanual movements that require coordinated actions of the two hands may be coordinated by synchronous bilateral activation of somatosensory and motor cortical areas in both hemispheres, by enhanced activation of individual neurons specialized for bimanual actions, or by both mechanisms. To investigate cortical neural mechanisms that mediate unimanual and bimanual prehension, we compared actions of the left and right hands in a reach to grasp-and-pull instructed-delay task. Spike trains were recorded with multiple electrode arrays placed in the hand area of primary motor (M1) and somatosensory (S1) cortex of the right hemisphere in macaques, allowing us to measure and compare the relative timing, amplitude, and synchronization of cortical activity in these areas as animals grasped and manipulated objects that differed in shape and location. We report that neurons in the right hemisphere show common task-related firing patterns for the two hands but actions of the ipsilateral hand elicited weaker and shorter-duration responses than those of the contralateral hand. We report significant bimanual activation of neurons in M1 but not in S1 cortex when animals have free choice of hand use in prehension tasks. Population ensemble responses in M1 thereby provide an accurate depiction of hand actions during skilled manual tasks. These studies also demonstrate that somatosensory cortical areas serve important cognitive and motor functions in skilled hand actions. Bilateral representation of hand actions may serve an important role in "motor equivalence" when the same movements are performed by either hand and in transfer of skill learning between the hands. Humans can manipulate small objects with the right or left hand but typically select the dominant hand to handle them. We trained monkeys to grasp and manipulate objects with either hand, while recording neural activity in primary motor (M1) and somatosensory (S1) cortex. Actions of both hands activate M1 neurons, but S1 neurons respond only to the contralateral hand. Bilateral sensitivity in M1 may aid skill transfer between hands after stroke or head injury.
需要双手协调动作的双手运动可能通过两个半球中感觉和运动皮质区域的同步双侧激活来协调,也可能通过专门用于双手运动的单个神经元的增强激活来协调,或者通过这两种机制来协调。为了研究介导单手和双手抓握的皮质神经机制,我们在一项到达抓握和拉指示延迟任务中比较了左手和右手的动作。在猴子的右半球初级运动(M1)和感觉(S1)皮质的手部区域放置多个电极阵列记录尖峰列车,使我们能够测量和比较这些区域皮质活动的相对定时、幅度和同步性,因为动物抓住和操纵形状和位置不同的物体。我们报告说,右半球的神经元表现出与双手相关的共同任务发射模式,但同侧手的动作比对侧手的动作引起的反应较弱且持续时间较短。我们报告说,当动物在手抓握任务中有自由选择手的使用时,M1 中的神经元会出现显著的双手激活,但 S1 皮质中不会出现。因此,M1 中的群体集合反应为熟练手动任务中的手部动作提供了准确的描述。这些研究还表明,感觉运动皮质区域在手的熟练动作中发挥重要的认知和运动功能。当双手执行相同的运动时,手部动作的双侧代表可能在“运动等价”中发挥重要作用,并且在手之间的技能学习转移中发挥重要作用。人类可以用右手或左手操纵小物体,但通常会选择惯用手来处理它们。我们训练猴子用左手或右手抓握和操纵物体,同时记录初级运动(M1)和感觉(S1)皮质的神经活动。双手的动作都会激活 M1 神经元,但 S1 神经元仅对对侧手有反应。M1 中的双侧敏感性可能有助于中风或头部损伤后手之间的技能转移。