Literature DB >> 24198328

The parietal reach region is limb specific and not involved in eye-hand coordination.

Eric A Yttri1, Cunguo Wang, Yuqing Liu, Lawrence H Snyder.   

Abstract

Primates frequently reach toward visual targets. Neurons in early visual areas respond to stimuli in the contralateral visual hemifield and without regard to which limb will be used to reach toward that target. In contrast, neurons in motor areas typically respond when reaches are performed using the contralateral limb and with minimal regard to the visuospatial location of the target. The parietal reach region (PRR) is located early in the visuomotor processing hierarchy. PRR neurons are significantly modulated when targets for either limb or eye movement appear, similar to early sensory areas; however, they respond to targets in either visual field, similar to motor areas. The activity could reflect the subject's attentional locus, movement of a specific effector, or a related function, such as coordinating eye-arm movements. To examine the role of PRR in the visuomotor pathway, we reversibly inactivated PRR. Inactivation effects were specific to contralateral limb movements, leaving ipsilateral limb and saccadic movements intact. Neither visual hemifield bias nor visual attention deficits were observed. Thus our results are consistent with a motoric rather than visual organization in PRR, despite its early location in the visuomotor pathway. We found no effects on the temporal coupling of coordinated saccades and reaches, suggesting that this mechanism lies downstream of PRR. In sum, this study clarifies the role of PRR in the visuomotor hierarchy: despite its early position, it is a limb-specific area influencing reach planning and is positioned upstream from an active eye-hand coordination-coupling mechanism.

Entities:  

Keywords:  eye-hand coordination; parietal reach region; reaching; visuomotor

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24198328      PMCID: PMC3921407          DOI: 10.1152/jn.00058.2013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


  77 in total

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7.  Region-Specific Summation Patterns Inform the Role of Cortical Areas in Selecting Motor Plans.

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Review 9.  Multiregional communication and the channel modulation hypothesis.

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