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Journal ArticleDOI

Do bimanual motor actions involve the dorsal premotor (PMd), cingulate (CMA) and posterior parietal (PPC) cortices? Comparison with primary and supplementary motor cortical areas.

I. Kermadi, +2 more
- 01 Jan 2000 - 
- Vol. 17, Iss: 3, pp 255-271
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TLDR
The results suggest that the five cortical areas PMd, CMA, PPC, SMA and M1 are participating to the control of sequential bimanually coordinated movements.
Abstract
Single neuronal activity was recorded from the dorsal premotor cortex (PMd), the cingulate motor area (CMA) and the posterior parietal cortex (PPC) in two Macaca fascicularis trained to perform a delayed conditional sequence of coordinated pull and grasp movements. The monkey had to perform three types of trials instructed in a random manner: (i) bimanually, using the two hands in a coordinated sequence of movements; (ii) unimanually, using the left hand only; (iii) unimanually, using the right hand only. The aim of this study was first to assess the bilateral relationships of the three cortical areas for unimanual motor control. Second, to establish whether the three cortical areas contain units reflecting bimanual synergy. A total of 255 task-related neurons were recorded from the PMd, CMA and PPC, where most neurons exhibited a significant modulation of activity in both contralateral and ipsilateral unimanual trials (bilateral neurons: 85, 77 and 61%, respectively). Lower proportions of neurons in PMd (7%), CMA (16%) and PPC (6%) were active in unimanual contralateral trials, but not in unimanual ipsilateral trials. The reverse (modulation of activity in ipsilateral but not contralateral unimanual trials) represented 5% of neurons in PMd, 7% in CMA and 3% in PPC. When comparing unimanual and bimanual trials to search evidence for bimanual coordination, 57% of PMd task-related neurons were classified as bimanual, defined as units in which the activity observed in bimanual trials could not be predicted from that associated with unimanual trials when comparing the same events related to the same arm. The proportion of bimanual neurons in CMA (56%) was comparable to that found in PMd (55%), whereas PPC exhibited a higher proportion of bimanual neurons (74%). Furthermore, comparison of the present data with our previous results regarding the supplementary (SMA) and primary (M1) motor cortical areas shows that there is no statistically significant difference between PMd, CMA, SMA and M1 with respect to the proportions of bimanual neurons. Altogether, these results suggest that the five cortical areas PMd, CMA, PPC, SMA and M1 are participating to the control of sequential bimanually coordinated movements. Inter-limb coordination may thus be controlled by a widely distributed network including several cortical and sub-cortical areas.

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A two-dimensional neuropsychology of defense: fear/anxiety and defensive distance

TL;DR: A picture of the neural systems controlling defense that updates and simplifies Gray's "Neuropsychology of Anxiety" is presented, based on two behavioural dimensions: 'def defensive distance' as defined by the Blanchards and 'defensive direction'.
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TL;DR: In the present review, consideration is given to the putative roles of uncrossed corticofugal fibers, branched bilateral corticomotoroneuronal projections, and segmental networks, and the potential for bilateral interactions to occur in various brain regions.
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TL;DR: The relatively uniform network of concordance clusters observed across the more complex finger-tapping tasks suggests that further complexity, beyond the use of multi-finger sequences or bimanual tasks, may be required to fully reveal those brain regions necessary to execute truly complex movements.
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Neural Activity in Primary Motor and Dorsal Premotor Cortex In Reaching Tasks With the Contralateral Versus Ipsilateral Arm

TL;DR: M1 is strongly activated during movements of the contralateral arm, but activity during ipsilateral arm movements is also common and usually different from that seen with the contalateral arm.
References
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Posterior parietal association cortex of the monkey: command functions for operations within extrapersonal space

TL;DR: A large proportion of area 5 neurons were relatively insensitive to passive joint rotations, as compared with similar neurons of the postcentral gyrus, but were driven to high rates of discharge when the same joint was rotated during an active movement of the animal.
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The updating of the representation of visual space in parietal cortex by intended eye movements.

TL;DR: Parietal cortex both anticipates theretinal consequences of eye movements and updates the retinal coordinates of remembered stimuli to generate a continuously accurate representation of visual space.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motor Areas of the Medial Wall: A Review of Their Location and Functional Activation

TL;DR: The analysis suggests that it is possible to identify at least four separate cortical areas on the medial wall of the hemisphere, which appear to be analogous to the pre-SMA, the SMA proper, and two of the cingulate motor areas of the monkey.
Journal ArticleDOI

The origin of corticospinal projections from the premotor areas in the frontal lobe

TL;DR: Observations indicate that a substantial component of the corticospinal system originates from the premotor areas in the frontal lobe, and raise serious questions about the utility of viewing the primary motor cortex as the “upper motoneuron” or “final common pathway” for the central control of movement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Memory related motor planning activity in posterior parietal cortex of macaque.

TL;DR: Unit recording studies in the lateral bank of the intraparietal cortex (area LIP) have demonstrated a response property not previously reported in posterior cortex, which appears to represent a memory-related motor-planning signal encoding motor error in the Rhesus monkey.
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