Winstein C J, Grafton S T, Pohl P S
Department of Biokinesiology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles 90033, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 1997 Mar;77(3):1581-94. doi: 10.1152/jn.1997.77.3.1581.
Differences in the kinematics and pattern of relative regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) during goal-directed arm aiming were investigated with the use of a Fitts continuous aiming paradigm with three difficulty conditions (index of difficulty, ID) and two aiming types (transport vs. targeting) in six healthy right-handed young participants with the use of video-based movement trajectory analysis and positron emission tomography. Movement time and kinematic characteristics were analyzed together with the magnitude of cerebral blood flow to identify areas of brain activity proportionate to task and movement variables. Significant differences in rCBF between task conditions were determined by analysis of variance with planned comparisons of means with the use of group mean weighted linear contrasts. Data were first analyzed for the group. Then individual subject differences for the movement versus no movement and task difficulty comparisons were related to each individual subjects' anatomy by magnetic resonance imaging. Significant differences in rCBF during reciprocal aiming compared with no-movement conditions were found in a mosaic of well-known cortical and subcortical areas associated with the planning and execution of goal-directed movements. These included cortical areas in the left sensorimotor, dorsal premotor, and ventral premotor cortices, caudal supplementary motor area (SMA) proper, and parietal cortex, and subcortical areas in the left putamen, globus pallidus, red nucleus, thalamus, and anterior cerebellum. As aiming task difficulty (ID) increased, rCBF increased in areas associated with the planning of more complex movements requiring greater visuomotor processing. These included bilateral occipital, left inferior parietal, and left dorsal cingulate cortices--caudal SMA proper and right dorsal premotor area. These same areas showed significant increases or decreases, respectively, when contrast means were compared with the use of movement time or relative acceleration time, respectively, as the weighting factor. Analysis of individual subject differences revealed a correspondence between the spatial extent of rCBF changes as a function of task ID and the individuals' movement times. As task ID decreased, significant increases in rCBF were evident in the right anterior cerebellum, left middle occipital gyrus, and right ventral premotor area. Functionally, these areas are associated with aiming conditions in which the motor execution demands are high (i.e., coordination of rapid reversals) and precise trajectory planning is minimal. These same areas showed significant increases or decreases, respectively, when contrast means were compared with the use of movement time or relative acceleration time, respectively, as the weighting factor. A functional dissociation resulted from the weighted linear contrasts between larger (limb transport) or smaller (endpoint targeting) type amplitude/target width aiming conditions. Areas with significantly greater rCBF for targeting were the left motor cortex, left intraparietal sulcus, and left caudate. In contrast, those areas with greater rCBF associated with limb transport included bilateral occipital lingual gyri and the right anterior cerebellum. Various theoretical explanations for the speed/accuracy tradeoffs of rapid aiming movements have been proposed since the original information theory hypothesis of Fitts. This is the first report to relate the predictable variations in motor control under changing task constraints with the functional anatomy of these rapid goal-directed aiming movements. Differences in unimanual aiming task difficulty lead to dissociable activation of cortical-subcortical networks. Further, these data suggest that when more precise targeting is required, independent of task difficulty, a cortical-subcortical loop composed of the contralateral motor cortex, intraparietal sulcus, and caudate is activated. This is consistent with the role of motor cortex
在六名健康的右利手年轻参与者中,利用基于视频的运动轨迹分析和正电子发射断层扫描技术,采用具有三种难度条件(难度指数,ID)和两种瞄准类型(运输与目标瞄准)的菲茨连续瞄准范式,研究了目标导向手臂瞄准过程中相对局部脑血流(rCBF)的运动学和模式差异。分析了运动时间和运动学特征以及脑血流大小,以确定与任务和运动变量成比例的脑活动区域。通过方差分析以及使用组均值加权线性对比对均值进行计划比较,确定任务条件之间rCBF的显著差异。首先对组数据进行分析。然后,通过磁共振成像将每个个体在运动与不运动以及任务难度比较方面的差异与每个个体的解剖结构相关联。与不运动条件相比,在与目标导向运动的计划和执行相关的一系列知名皮质和皮质下区域中,发现了往复瞄准过程中rCBF的显著差异。这些区域包括左侧感觉运动皮质、背侧运动前皮质和腹侧运动前皮质、尾侧辅助运动区(SMA)、顶叶皮质中的皮质区域,以及左侧壳核、苍白球、红核、丘脑和小脑前叶中的皮质下区域。随着瞄准任务难度(ID)的增加,与需要更大视觉运动处理的更复杂运动计划相关的区域中rCBF增加。这些区域包括双侧枕叶、左侧顶下小叶和左侧背侧扣带回皮质——尾侧SMA和右侧背侧运动前区。当分别使用运动时间或相对加速时间作为加权因子比较对比均值时,这些相同区域分别显示出显著增加或减少。个体差异分析揭示了rCBF变化的空间范围作为任务ID的函数与个体运动时间之间的对应关系。随着任务ID的降低,右侧小脑前叶、左侧枕中回和右侧腹侧运动前区的rCBF明显增加。在功能上,这些区域与运动执行要求较高(即快速反转的协调)且精确轨迹规划最少的瞄准条件相关。当分别使用运动时间或相对加速时间作为加权因子比较对比均值时,这些相同区域分别显示出显著增加或减少。较大(肢体运输)或较小(端点目标瞄准)类型幅度/目标宽度瞄准条件之间的加权线性对比导致了功能分离。目标瞄准中rCBF显著更大的区域是左侧运动皮质、左侧顶内沟和左侧尾状核。相比之下,与肢体运输相关的rCBF更大的区域包括双侧枕叶舌回和右侧小脑前叶。自菲茨最初的信息理论假设以来,已经提出了各种关于快速瞄准运动速度/准确性权衡的理论解释。这是第一份将不断变化的任务约束下运动控制的可预测变化与这些快速目标导向瞄准运动的功能解剖学联系起来的报告。单手瞄准任务难度的差异导致皮质 - 皮质下网络的可分离激活。此外,这些数据表明,当需要更精确的目标瞄准时,与任务难度无关,由对侧运动皮质、顶内沟和尾状核组成的皮质 - 皮质下环路被激活。这与运动皮质的作用一致