| Literature DB >> 26880543 |
Andrea Leo1,2, Giacomo Handjaras1, Matteo Bianchi2,3, Hamal Marino2, Marco Gabiccini2,3,4, Andrea Guidi2, Enzo Pasquale Scilingo2,5, Pietro Pietrini1,2,6,7, Antonio Bicchi2,3, Marco Santello8, Emiliano Ricciardi1,2.
Abstract
How the human brain controls hand movements to carry out different tasks is still debated. The concept of synergy has been proposed to indicate functional modules that may simplify the control of hand postures by simultaneously recruiting sets of muscles and joints. However, whether and to what extent synergic hand postures are encoded as such at a cortical level remains unknown. Here, we combined kinematic, electromyography, and brain activity measures obtained by functional magnetic resonance imaging while subjects performed a variety of movements towards virtual objects. Hand postural information, encoded through kinematic synergies, were represented in cortical areas devoted to hand motor control and successfully discriminated individual grasping movements, significantly outperforming alternative somatotopic or muscle-based models. Importantly, hand postural synergies were predicted by neural activation patterns within primary motor cortex. These findings support a novel cortical organization for hand movement control and open potential applications for brain-computer interfaces and neuroprostheses.Entities:
Keywords: decoding; encoding; fMRI; hand control; human; motor cortex; neuroscience; synergies
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26880543 PMCID: PMC4786436 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.13420
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140