Title: Voluntary Movement
1Voluntary Movement
- From Ch. 38
- Principles of Neural Science, 4th Ed.
- Kandel et al
2Voluntary movement
- Voluntary movements are organized in cortex
- Sensory feed back
- Visual information
- Proprioceptive information
- Sounds and somatosensory information
- Goal of movement
- Vary in response to the same stimulus depending
on behavioral task (precision vs. power grip) - Improves with learning/ experience
- Can be generated in response to external stimuli
or internally
3Cortical organization
- Hierarchical organization of motor control and
task features - Populations of neurons encode motor parameters
e.g. force, direction, spatial patterns - The summed activity in a population determines
kinematic details of movement - Voluntary movement is highly adaptable
- Novel behavior requires processing in several
motor and parietal areas as it is continuously
monitored for errors and then modified - Primary motor cortex
- Fires shortly before and during movement
- Fires only with certain tasks and patterns of
muscle activation - Premotor areas encode global features of movement
- Set-related neurons
- Sensorimotor transformations (external
environment integrated into motor programs) - Delayed response
4Motor cortex
- Primary motor cortex
- Activated directly by peripheral stimulation
- Executes movements
- Adapt movements to new conditions
- Premotor areas (different aspects of motor
planning) - Dorsal premotor area (dPMA)
- Selection of action Sensorimotor
transformations Externally triggered movements
external cues that do not contain spatial
information - Ventral premotor area (vPMA)
- Conforming the hand to shape of objects Mirror
neurons Selection of action Sensorimotor
transformations Externally triggered movements - Supplementary motor area (SMA)
- Preparation of motor sequence from memory
(internally not in response to external
information) - Pre-supplementary motor area (pre-SMA)
- Motor sequence learning
- Cingulate motor area (CMA)
- Dorsal and ventral portions of caudal and
roastral CMA (along the cingulate sulcus) - Functions to be determined
5Somatotopical organization
Sequence in human and monkey M1 similar Face and
finger representations are much bigger than
others Greater motor control required for face
and fingers
6Motor cortex stimulation
- Historical perspective
- 1870 Discovery of electrical excitability of
cortex in the dog first brain maps (Fritsh
and Hitzig) - 1875 First motor map of the primate brain
(Ferrier) - 1926 Recording of extracellular spike activity
of a nerve fiber (Adrian) - 1937 First experimentally derived human motor
map (Penfield and Boldrey) - 1957 Microelectrode recordings to map primary
somatosensory area (Mountcastle et al.) - 1958 First recordings from neurons in awake
monkeys (Jasper) - 1967 Intracortical microstimulation for mapping
of cortical motor output (Asanuma) - 1985 TMS is used to activate motor cortex
noninvasively (Barker et al.)
7Transcranial stimulation
- TES transcranial electrical stimulation (Merton
and Morton 1980) - High voltage (1-2kV), short duration pulses
(10-50us), low resistance electrodes. - Direct stimulation occurs at the anode
- Current passes through skin and scalp
(resistance) before reaching cortex. - TMS transcranial magnetic stimulation (Barker
1985) - Discharge of large capacitive currents (5-10kA,
2-300us) through a coil producing high magnetic
field (1-2T). - Stimulus site depends on coil design, coil
orientation and stimulus intensity - Non-invasive techniques to study
- Structure-function relationship (e.g. rTMS
virtual lesion) - Map brain motor output (typically averaged EMG as
output MEP) - Measure conduction velocity
- TMS has advantages over TES
- No discomfort (no current passes through skin and
high current densities can be avoided) - No attenuation of field when passing through
tissue - No skin preparation (conduction gel)
8Transcranial magnetic stimulation
Principles of TMS
Coil design
9Motor cortex stimulation
- Movements can be evoked by direct stimulation of
motor cortex - Activates corticospinal fibers
- Direct from motor cortex to spinal motor neurons
or interneurons - Evokes a short latency EMG response in
contralateral muscles - Latency depends on corticospinal distance
impulses have to travel
10Cortex-muscle connections
Wrist muscle
Shoulder muscle
Maps can be generated by intracortical
microstimulation Sites controlling individual
muscles are distributed over a wide area of motor
cortex Muscle representations overlap in
cortex Stimulation of single sites activates
several muscles (diverging innervation) Many
motor cortical neurons contribute to multijointed
movements
11Motor cortex
- Primary motor cortex
- Activated directly by peripheral stimulation
- Executes movements
- Adapt movements to new conditions
- Premotor areas (different aspects of motor
planning) - Dorsal premotor area (dPMA)
- Selection of action Sensorimotor
transformations Externally triggered movements
external cues that do not contain spatial
information - Ventral premotor area (vPMA)
- Conforming the hand to shape of objects Mirror
neurons Selection of action Sensorimotor
transformations Externally triggered movements - Supplementary motor area (SMA)
- Preparation of motor sequence from memory
(internally not in response to external
information) - Pre-supplementary motor area (pre-SMA)
- Motor sequence learning
- Cingulate motor area (CMA)
- Dorsal and ventral portions of caudal and
roastral CMA (along the cingulate sulcus) - Functions to be determined
12Cortical projections
- Premotor cortex and primary motor cortex has
reciprocal connections - Parietal projections to premotor areas
(sensorimotor transformations) - Prefrontal projections to some premotor areas
(cognitive-affective control and learning) - Premotor areas and primary motor areas have
direct projections to spinal motor neurons
13Other projections
- Inputs from cerebellum
- Do not project directly to spinal cord
- Inputs from basal ganglia
- Do not project directly to spinal cord
- Cortico-striatal pathways
- Motor loops
- Motor cortex gt striatum gt globus pallidus gt
Thalamus gt motor cortex
14Motor cortex plasticity
- The functional organization of M1 changes after
transection of facial nerve
15Practiced movements
- M1 representation becomes more dense with
practice
PET data
16Pyramidal tract
- Successive cortical stimuli result in
progressively larger EPSP in spinal motor neurons - Make it possible to make individual movement of
digits and isolated movements of proximal joints - Direct corticospinal control is necessary for
fine control of digits - Bilateral sectioning of the pyramidal tract
removes the ability if fine movements
17Ia spinal circuits
- Spinal Ia neurons are inhibitory interneurons
- Can respond directly to changes in somatosensory
input - Cortical centers do not need to respond to minor
changes - The Ia inhibitory neurons in the spinal cord
sends inhibitory signals to antagonist motor
neurons when muscle spindles in the agonist
muscle are activated - Ia neurons also inhibits spinal reflexes
- Spinal circuits are used as components of complex
behaviors
18Direction of movement
- Activity in individual neurons in M1 is related
to muscle force and not direction
19Postspike facilitation
- Spike-triggered averaging
20M1 and force
- Linear relationship between M1 firing rate and
force generation - Two types of motor cortical neurons
- Phasic-tonic initial dynamic burst
- Tonic tonic high level
21Direction of movement
Population vector
Single neuron
Direction of movement is encoded by a population
of neurons Motor cortical neurons are broadly
tuned to directions but have a preferred direction
22Direction of movement
M1 encoding of force required to maintain a
direction
Single
- Arm movements without and with external loads
- Unloaded preferred direction to the upper left
- Loaded opposite, preferred direction to the
lower right - A cells firing rate increases if a load opposes
movement in preferred direction and decreases if
load pulls in preferred direction
23Activity depends on motor task
Precision grip same activity whether force is
light or heavy Power grip No activity, but EMG
activity the same
24Complexity of movement
25Internal and external information
- Influence on visual cue and prior training in
motor cortex
26Motor preparation
- Dorsal premotor area is active during preparation
- Fires according to different delay times
- Fires during the whole period of anticipation
27Visuomotor transformations
- Separate but parallel fronto-parietal projections
28Ventral premotor cortex
- Specific hand tasks activate vPMC
29Mirror neurons
- Precision grip
- Observed movement
- Observed human movement
- Self-performed movement
30Summary
- Hierarchical organization of motor control and
task features - Populations of neurons encode motor parameters
e.g. force, direction, spatial patterns - The summed activity in a population determines
kinematic details of movement - Voluntary movement is highly adaptable
- Novel behavior requires processing in several
motor and parietal areas as it is continuously
monitored for errors and then modified - Primary motor cortex
- Fires shortly before and during movement
- Fires only with certain tasks and patterns of
muscle activation - Premotor areas encode global features of movement
- Set-related neurons
- Sensorimotor transformations (external
environment integrated into motor programs) - Delayed response