van Mier H, Tempel L W, Perlmutter J S, Raichle M E, Petersen S E
Department of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 1998 Oct;80(4):2177-99. doi: 10.1152/jn.1998.80.4.2177.
The aim of this study is to assess brain activity measured during continuous performance of design tracing tasks. Three issues were addressed: identification of brain areas involved in performing maze and square tracing tasks, investigation of differences and similarities in these areas related to dominant and nondominant hand performance, and most importantly, examination of the effects of practice in these areas. A total of 32 normal, right-handed subjects were instructed to move a pen with the dominant right hand (16 subjects) or nondominant left hand (16 subjects) continuously through cut-out maze and square patterns with their eyes closed during a 40-s positron emission tomography (PET) scan to measure regional blood flow. There were six conditions: 1) holding the pen on a writing tablet without moving it (rest condition); 2) tracing a maze without practice; 3) tracing the same maze after 10 min of practice; 4) tracing a novel maze; and tracing an easily learned square design at 5) high or 6) low speed. To identify brain areas generally related to continuous tracing, data analyses were performed on the combined data acquired during the five tracing scans minus rest conditions. Areas activated included: primary and secondary motor areas, somatosensory, parietal, and inferior frontal cortex, thalamus, and several cerebellar regions. Then comparisons were made between right- and left-hand performance. There were no significant differences in performance. As for brain activations, only primary motor cortex and anterior cerebellum showed activations that switched with hand of performance. All other areas, with the exception of the midbrain, showed activations that were common for both right- and left-hand performance. These areas were further analyzed for significant conditional effects. We found patterns of activation related to velocity in the contralateral primary motor cortex, related to unskilled performance in right premotor and parietal areas and left cerebellum, related to skilled performance in supplementary motor area (SMA), and related to the level of capacity at which subjects were performing in left premotor cortex, ipsilateral anterior cerebellum, right posterior cerebellum and right dentate nucleus. These findings demonstrate two important principles: 1) practice produces a shift in activity from one set of areas to a different area and 2) practice-related activations appeared in the same hemisphere regardless of the hand used, suggesting that some of the areas related to maze learning must code information at an abstract level that is distinct from the motor performance of the task itself.
本研究的目的是评估在连续进行设计追踪任务期间所测量的大脑活动。研究涉及三个问题:确定参与迷宫和方形追踪任务的脑区,调查这些区域中与优势手和非优势手表现相关的异同,以及最重要的是,考察这些区域中练习的效果。共有32名正常的右利手受试者,被指示在40秒的正电子发射断层扫描(PET)期间,闭上眼睛用优势右手(16名受试者)或非优势左手(16名受试者)连续穿过剪出的迷宫和方形图案,以测量局部血流。有六种情况:1)将笔放在书写板上不动(休息状态);2)无练习地追踪迷宫;3)练习10分钟后追踪相同的迷宫;4)追踪新的迷宫;以及5)高速或6)低速追踪一个容易学会的方形图案。为了确定通常与连续追踪相关的脑区,对在五次追踪扫描减去休息状态期间获取的合并数据进行了数据分析。激活的区域包括:初级和次级运动区、体感区、顶叶和额下回皮质、丘脑以及几个小脑区域。然后对右手和左手的表现进行了比较。表现上没有显著差异。至于大脑激活情况,只有初级运动皮质和前小脑的激活随着执行任务的手而切换。除中脑外,所有其他区域的激活在右手和左手表现中都是常见的。对这些区域进一步分析其显著的条件效应。我们发现了与对侧初级运动皮质中的速度相关的激活模式、与右运动前区和顶叶区域以及左小脑的非熟练表现相关的激活模式、与辅助运动区(SMA)中的熟练表现相关的激活模式,以及与受试者在左运动前皮质、同侧前小脑、右后小脑和右齿状核中的执行能力水平相关的激活模式。这些发现证明了两个重要原则:1)练习会使活动从一组区域转移到不同的区域;2)与练习相关的激活出现在同一半球,而与使用哪只手无关,这表明一些与迷宫学习相关的区域必须在一个抽象水平上编码信息,该水平与任务本身的运动表现不同。