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Voluntary Movement I. Psychophysical principles & Neural control of reaching and grasping Claude Ghez, M.D.

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Voluntary Movement I. Psychophysical principles & Neural control of reaching and grasping. Claude Ghez, M.D. Reflex and voluntary movements are sensorimotor transformations. Feedforward vs. feedback control. Reflex control differs from voluntary control - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Voluntary Movement I

Voluntary Movement I.

Psychophysical principles& Neural control of

reaching and grasping

Claude Ghez, M.D.

Page 2: Voluntary Movement I

• Reflex and voluntary movements are sensorimotor transformations.– Feedforward vs. feedback control.

• Reflex control differs from voluntary control– Spatial organization of reflexes reflects hard-wired connections vs.

behavioral demands and context: decisions. Voluntary movements are organized to be appropriate to address behavioral goal: kinematic vs. dynamic transformations - internal models.

– Reflex latency & duration reflect mainly fixed neuromuscular constraints: conduction, transmission, contraction. These, also influence timing of voluntary movement, but information processing and accuracy constraints are the critical reaction time and movement duration.

– Neural organization of voluntary movements is highly dependent on learning and plasticity. Adaptability is critical over long term.

Introduction

Page 3: Voluntary Movement I

1. Voluntary movements require decisions and information processing: Latency and duration:

• Reaction time.• Parallel processing.• Speed-accuracy tradeoffs.

2. Sensorimotor transformations in reaching and grasping.

• Kinematics: visuomotor transformations. Movement vectors• Dynamics: internal models.• Role of vision and proprioception in feedback and feedforward

control

3. Organization of motor cortical areas for reaching and grasping

• Multiple motor areas• Somatotopic organization• Redundancy

Today

Page 4: Voluntary Movement I

Latency or “Reaction time” depends on decision

Reaction time paradigm• Warning -> cue= go signal•Simple RT: single or predictablecue Subject knows what response to make in advance•Choice: multiple unpredictable cues (e.g. colors, symbols, spatial locations) each requiring different responses.

Stage theory of reaction time

Page 5: Voluntary Movement I

Unpredictable stimuli

Predictable sequence

“Reaction time” depends on practice and learning

Page 6: Voluntary Movement I

Tones

Elbow forceMeasured byStrain gauge

>200

100-200

<100

Resting force

Target

Synch Cue

High

Middle

Low

High

Middle

Low

High

Middle

Low

High

Middle

Low

Right direction

Wrong direction

Response features can be processed in parallel

Page 7: Voluntary Movement I

Speed-Accuracy tradeoff (Fitts’ law)Error varies with speed

Page 8: Voluntary Movement I

Reaching reflects several sensorimotor transformationskinematic and dynamic planning

Page 9: Voluntary Movement I

Reaching: hand and joint kinematics are planned independently

Page 10: Voluntary Movement I

Extent and direction are planned in advance

Paths are straight Hand trajectories:Speed & acceleration Scale with distance

Reaching involves scaling a ‘trajectory primitive’ to target distance. Learned scaling factors& reference frame

Page 11: Voluntary Movement I

Mobility

Accuracy requires knowledge of mechanical propertiesof the limbs (“the plant”): role of proprioception

Normal control Patient without proprioception

Page 12: Voluntary Movement I

Patient MAControl MFG

Extent

Peak Acceleration

900

0Movement Direction

PK Acceleration

Movement time (ms)

0

300

Movement Direction

Peak Acceleration

Directional variations in inertial resistance arecorrected by compensatory variations in movement time

Proprioception is critical

Page 13: Voluntary Movement I

Proprioceptive information is used for feedforward control: Internal models

Page 14: Voluntary Movement I

Reaching reflects several sensorimotor transformationsKinematics and dynamics

Parallel planningof concurrent actions:hand preshaping

Page 15: Voluntary Movement I

Macaque Monkey Human

Prefrontal cortex

Premotor cortex

Supplementary motor area (SMA)

Central sulcusPosterior Parietal

CortexPremotor

cortex

Corpus Callosum

Supplementary motor area (SMA)

Primary motor cortex

Primary motor cortex

Primary sensory cortex

Motor areas of the brain

Page 16: Voluntary Movement I

Somatotopic organization revieled by electrical stimulation of the cortical surface

Page 17: Voluntary Movement I
Page 18: Voluntary Movement I

Electrical stimulation is medically usefulEarly experiments

Page 19: Voluntary Movement I

Electrical stimulation is medically useful:More recent experiments

Page 20: Voluntary Movement I

Deltoid Ext. Carpi Rad.

Posterior

Anterior

Medial Lateral

Representation of individual muscles is patchy and distributed

Posterior

Anterior

Medial Lateral

Page 21: Voluntary Movement I

Cell activity associated with movement of individual digitsis broadly distributed: convergence of spinal projections