Martin J H, Ghez C
Exp Brain Res. 1985;57(3):427-42. doi: 10.1007/BF00237829.
In a previous study in the cat, we have reported that motor cortex neurons discharging before the initiation of an aimed forearm response (lead cells) are better timed to movement of a display (stimulus) than to the response. The present study was done to distinguish the coding of stimulus and response features in the discharge patterns of such early activity in motor cortex. Single neurons were recorded in the arm area of motor cortex in three cats performing the same pair of responses (forearm flexion and extension) but to display movements in either of the two directions by changing display polarity. The modulation of lead cell activity was contingent on the occurrence of the learned motor response and timed to the stimulus in all conditions. The majority of lead cells (88%, n = 50) fell into one of two distinct classes. In one class of neurons, force-direction (56%, n = 32), activity was contingent on a single direction of forelimb response (flexion or extension) and was thus independent of the direction of the display stimulus. The only muscles whose patterns matched the activity of this class of response-related neurons were forelimb flexors and extensors. In these neurons, the onset of modulation was timed to one or the other of the two stimuli according to the stimulus direction which elicited the appropriate response. Thus, the display-related input to these neurons varied according to the response required. In the second class of neurons, stimulus-direction (32%, n = 18), modulation was associated with a specific stimulus direction rather than the response direction. The pattern of activity of these neurons was similar to the pattern of EMG signals of shoulder and neck muscles during the different task conditions. The contraction of proximal and axial muscles corresponded to a second response elicited by the stimulus, namely attempts at head rotation towards the moving display and was independent of the conditioned forelimb response in both time of onset and direction. To test the possibility that stimulus-direction neurons participated in the control of head rotation we trained two of the animals to also produce isometric changes in neck torque in the direction of the moving display without making the forelimb response. The activity of stimulus-direction neurons was similarly modulated during performance of the neck task. By contrast, force-direction neurons examined during the neck task were either unmodulated or discharged after the neck response.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
在之前对猫的一项研究中,我们报告称,在有目标的前臂反应开始之前放电的运动皮层神经元(超前细胞),与反应相比,其放电时间与显示器(刺激)的运动更同步。本研究旨在区分运动皮层这种早期活动放电模式中刺激和反应特征的编码。在三只猫的运动皮层臂区记录单个神经元,这三只猫执行相同的一对反应(前臂屈伸),但通过改变显示器极性使显示器向两个方向中的任意一个方向运动。超前细胞活动的调制取决于习得的运动反应的发生,并且在所有条件下都与刺激同步。大多数超前细胞(88%,n = 50)可分为两个不同的类别。在一类神经元中,力的方向(56%,n = 32),其活动取决于前肢反应的单一方向(屈曲或伸展),因此与显示器刺激的方向无关。其模式与这类反应相关神经元活动相匹配的唯一肌肉是前肢屈肌和伸肌。在这些神经元中,调制的起始根据引发适当反应的刺激方向,与两种刺激中的一种同步。因此,这些神经元的显示器相关输入根据所需反应而变化。在第二类神经元中,刺激方向(32%,n = 18),调制与特定的刺激方向而非反应方向相关。在不同任务条件下,这些神经元的活动模式与肩部和颈部肌肉的肌电图信号模式相似。近端和轴向肌肉的收缩对应于刺激引发的第二种反应,即试图将头部转向移动的显示器,并且在起始时间和方向上均与条件性前肢反应无关。为了测试刺激方向神经元参与头部旋转控制的可能性,我们训练了其中两只动物,使其在不做出前肢反应的情况下,也在移动显示器的方向上产生颈部扭矩的等长变化。在执行颈部任务期间,刺激方向神经元的活动受到类似的调制。相比之下,在颈部任务期间检查的力方向神经元要么未被调制,要么在颈部反应之后放电。(摘要截选至400字)