Exploring the Consistent Roles of Motor Areas Across Voluntary Movement and Locomotion

Author:

Fortier-Lebel Nicolas1ORCID,Nakajima Toshi2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Département de neurosciences, Département de médecine, Centre interdisciplinaire de recherche sur le cerveau et l’apprentissage, Groupe de recherche sur la signalisation neurale et la circuiterie, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Canada

2. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Kindai University, Osaka-Sayama, Japan

Abstract

Multiple cortical motor areas are critically involved in the voluntary control of discrete movement (e.g., reaching) and gait. Here, we outline experimental findings in nonhuman primates with clinical reports and research in humans that explain characteristic movement control mechanisms in the primary, supplementary, and presupplementary motor areas, as well as in the dorsal premotor area. We then focus on single-neuron activity recorded while monkeys performed motor sequences consisting of multiple discrete movements, and we consider how area-specific control mechanisms may contribute to the performance of complex movements. Following this, we explore the motor areas in cats that we have considered as analogs of those in primates based on similarities in their cortical surface topology, anatomic connections, microstimulation effects, and activity patterns. Emphasizing that discrete movement and gait modification entail similar control mechanisms, we argue that single-neuron activity in each area of the cat during gait modification is compatible with the function ascribed to the activity in the corresponding area in primates, recorded during the performance of discrete movements. The findings that demonstrate the premotor areas’ contribution to locomotion, currently unique to the cat model, should offer highly valuable insights into the control mechanisms of locomotion in primates, including humans.

Funder

Fonds de Recherche Québec – Santé

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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