Motor control Flashcards
How did Penfield construct the somatotopic map of the body?
- By stimulating primary motor cortex during surgery for epilepsy
- Hands, feet and the mouth are very overrepresented
Apart from the motor cortex, what other area of the brain is responsible for coordinating movement?
cerebellum
- has more neurons than the cortex
What is the role of the cerebellum in coordinating movement?
- Computes the contributions of muscles
- Projects via the ventrolateral thalamus back to the motor cortex, allowing current movements to be modified
What is the result of damage to the cerebellum
a) Flocculondular/vermis
b) Intermediate zone
c) Lateral zone
a) posture & balance problems
b) limb rigidity
c) weakness and decomposition of movement
What is the role of the supplementary motor area?
- Motor planning
- Responds to specific parts of a learned sequence
- Stimulation produces involuntary movement
What are mirror neurones?
Neurons that respond both to the performing of an action and the sight of someone carrying out an action
What are the 3 possible functions of mirror neurons?
- Immitation
- Understanding the actions of others
- Encoding intention?
How is mirror neuron activity influenced by autism?
- children with autism have lower mirror neuron activity in the ventral premotor cortex when imitating facial expressions
- level of activity corresponds to level of autism severity
What is limb apraxia?
- Inappropriate limb movement in response to commands
- Caused by damage to left frontal/parietal cortex
- Can also have lesions in left ventral premotor cortex, producing inability to understand other people’s gestures
What is constructional apraxia?
- Inability to perceive/imagine geometric shapes
- Caused by damage to right parietal cortex