motor control 2 Flashcards
motor cortex
Primary motor cortex exerts quite direct, top down control over muscular activity, with as few as one synapse (in the spine) between a cortical neuron and innervation of muscle cells
Descending projections from cortical motor areas
- Motor command originates in motor cortex pyramidal cells (in layer 5-6, grey matter).
- These are the upper motor neurons.
- Pyramidal cell axons project directly or indirectly (e.g. via brainstem) to spinal cord, where they synapse with lower motor neurons.
- The axons of these upper motor (pyramidal) neurons form the pyramidal tract
- Most cortical projections innervate contralateral motor units
dorsolateral tracts
distal limbs
divide into: dorsolateral corticospinal tract (cortex → spine) and dorsolateral corticorubrospinal tract (cortex → red nucleus → spine, innervates distal limbs and also facial muscles due to nuclei of cranial nerve, synapse – UMN → LMN
ventromedial tracts
proximal limb muscles
divide into ventromedial corticospinal tract and ventromedial cortico-brainstem-spinal tract (synapses with various parts of midbrain and brain stem, indirect pathway)
• both pathways project on both sides
basal ganglia
A group of structures beneath the cortex that act as a ‘gate-keeper’ for control of the motor system (muscles)
• The basal ganglia are a group of nuclei lying deep within cerebral hemispheres
• Role in motor control not fully understood
• Basal ganglia dysfunction implicated in many disorders
• Multicomponent system of structures
how basal ganglia work
• Receives excitatory input from many areas of cortex (Glutamate)
• Output goes back to cortex via the thalamus
• Output is mainly inhibitory (GABA)
• Complex internal connectivity involving 5 principle nuclei:
o Substantia Nigra
o Caudate & Putamen
o Globus Pallidus
o Subthalamic Nucleus
Disinhibitory – increases level of excitation of cortex – increase success of motor commands getting to muscles
the selection problem
- Multiple command systems
- Spatially distributed
- Processing in parallel
- All act through final common motor path [Cannot do more then one thing (well) at a time]
- How do you resolve the competition?
the cerebellum
The cerebellum is a large brain structure that acts as a ‘parallel processor’, enabling smooth, co-ordinated movements. It may also be very important in a range of cognitive tasks.
• Like basal ganglia, no direct projection to the lower motor neurons – instead modulate activity of upper motor neurons
• Projects to almost all upper motor neurons
inputs form spinal cord, cortex and vestibular system
cerebellar function
- It knows what the current motor command is
- It knows about actual body position and movement
- It projects back to motor cortex
- Computes motor error and adjusts cortical motor commands accordingly
agency of action
- As adults we take ‘sense of agency’ for granted
- As such, violations of sense of agency give us a perceptual shock
- Evidence suggests that sense of agency is retrospectively created
- Connections between frontal areas that develop motor plans for voluntary action and the parietal (association) areas that monitor outcomes play a key part in computing sense of agency
- The delay between motor command, and perceived outcome is crucial – too short or too long can disrupt sense of agency