Shared brain areas but not functional connections controlling movement timing and order.

Gaëtan Garraux, Christopher McKinney, Tao Wu, Kenji Kansaku, Guido Nolte, Mark Hallett

Human Motor Control Section, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-1428, USA.

Journal Article: Journal of Neuroscience (impact factor: 7.18). 07/2005; 25(22):5290-7. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0340-05.2005

Abstract

Virtually every aspect of the enormous repertoire of human behaviors is embedded in a sequential context, but brain mechanisms underlying the adjustment of two fundamental dimensions defining a motor sequence (order of a series of movements and intervals separating them) as a function of a given goal are poorly understood. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we demonstrate that, at the neuronal level, these tasks can only be distinguished by differences in functional interactions between associative areas of common activation, which included bilateral subcortico-parieto-frontal regions, and two subcortical structures. Activity in these shared associative areas was preferentially coupled with that in right putamen during manipulation of timing and with that in right posterior cerebellum during manipulation of serial order. This finding is important because it provides evidence for an efficient organization of the brain during cognitive control of motor sequences and supports a recently proposed principle according to which the role of brain regions involved in different behavioral tasks without differential alterations in their measured activity depends on changes in their interactions with other connected areas as a function of the tasks.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

associative areas
 
brain mechanisms
 
brain regions
 
cognitive control
 
different behavioral tasks
 
differential alterations
 
efficient organization
 
enormous repertoire
 
functional interactions
 
functional magnetic resonance imaging
 
fundamental dimensions defining
 
given goal
 
human behaviors
 
included bilateral subcortico-parieto-frontal regions
 
measured activity
 
motor sequence
 
motor sequences
 
proposed principle
 
shared associative areas