Donchin O, Gribova A, Steinberg O, Bergman H, Vaadia E
Department of Physiology and the Center for Neural Computation, The Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel.
Nature. 1998 Sep 17;395(6699):274-8. doi: 10.1038/26220.
Many voluntary movements involve coordination between the limbs. However, there have been very few attempts to study the neuronal mechanisms that mediate this coordination. Here we have studied the activity of cortical neurons while monkeys performed tasks that required coordination between the two arms. We found that most neurons in the primary motor cortex (MI) show activity specific to bimanual movements (bimanual-related activity), which is strikingly different from the activity of the same neurons during unimanual movements. Moreover, units in the supplementary motor area (SMA; the area of cortex most often associated with bimanual coordination) showed no more bimanual-related activity than units in MI. Our results challenge the classic view that MI controls the contralateral (opposite) side of the body and that SMA is responsible for the coordination of the arms. Rather, our data suggest that both cortical areas share the control of bilateral coordination.
许多自主运动都涉及肢体之间的协调。然而,很少有人尝试研究介导这种协调的神经机制。在这里,我们研究了猴子执行需要双臂协调的任务时皮质神经元的活动。我们发现,初级运动皮层(MI)中的大多数神经元表现出特定于双手运动的活动(双手相关活动),这与同一神经元在单手运动期间的活动明显不同。此外,辅助运动区(SMA;最常与双手协调相关的皮质区域)中的神经元与MI中的神经元相比,并没有表现出更多的双手相关活动。我们的结果挑战了经典观点,即MI控制身体的对侧,而SMA负责手臂的协调。相反,我们的数据表明,这两个皮质区域共同控制双侧协调。