Neuroscience Motor function

Motor Function

Primary Areas of Motor Control

  • Cerebral Cortex

  • Basal Ganglia

  • Cerebellum


Cerebrum

Primary motor cortex (M1)

  • Located in precentral gyrus

  • Origin of cortico-spinal tract

  • Works with other motor area to plan and implement movement

  • Lesions to primary motor cortex lead to loss of voluntary movement on contralateral side of body

Premotor and supplementary motor areas

  • Premotor: located anterior to M1 

    • plays role in Praxis (ability to plan motor movements)

  • Supplementary motor area: part of premotor area 

    • plays role in bilateral control of posture and praxis


Frontal Eye Fields

  • Responsible for visual attention and directing visual saccades to stimulus of interest


Motor Planning

  • Ideational praxis: the ability to cognitively understand the motor demands of a task

  • Ideomotor planning: the ability to access and execute the motor plan


Basal Ganglia

  • Stereotypical

    • Hard wired patterns

    • Develop as a normal part of nervous system maturation

    • Walking, arm stretch during yawns, arm swing during walking

      -    Automated

- Movement patterns that are mediated by conscious control while learning, but become         automated once learned

- Riding a bike, driving, writing

  • May have a role in cognitive processes related to rewarding and addictive behaviors

  • May play a role in ADHD as it relates to impulse control and turn-taking

  • Neurotransmitters (Dopamine, GABA, Acetylcholine)

Basal Ganglia Pathways: 

- Primary motor cortex (M1) → Basal Ganglia → Thalamus → back to M1 and premotor areas

Lesions of Basal Ganglia

  • Symptoms = Difficulty initiating, continuing, or stopping movements

  • Examples = parkinson's disease, huntington’s disease, cervical dystonia, myoclonus-dystonia, tourette’s syndrome

Cerebellum

  • Coordination of movement

  • Regulation of muscle tone

  • Maintenance of posture and equilibrium

  • Proprioception

Cerebellar lobes

  • Archicerebellum (Flocculonodular)

    • Central area, receives information from vestibular nuclei

    • Damage to this lobe results in impairments of balance and gait

  • Paleocerebellum (Anterior)

    • Information from anterior and posterior spinocerebellar tracts

    • Damage = difficulty with precision movements of body and limbs

  • Neocerebellum (Posterior)

    • Receives information from cerebral hemispheres

    • Damage = impairments with planning anticipatory movements and cognitive function of movement

Cerebellar Lesions

  • Ataxia (loss of coordination and balance, difficulty with walking)

  • Dysmetria (inability to judge distance, speed and power of movements)

  • Inability to regulate reciprocal movements



Sensory Function and Dysfunction

Sensory Pathway: Sensory Information → Thalamus → Postcentral gyrus (SS1)

  • Damage to the primary sensory cortex will result in contralateral sensory loss


Secondary Somatosensory Cortex (SS2)

  • Found posterior to the primary somatosensory cortex and is neurally tied to it

  • This is where meaning is attached to incoming sensory information

  • Synthesizes multiple sensory inputs to create a complete comprehension of the object being felt


Lesions

  • Perceptual Dysfunction

    • Tactile: tactile agnosias (inability to recognize objects by touch)

    • Visual: visual agnosias (inability to recognize object by sight)

    • Auditory: auditory agnosias (inability to recognize sounds)