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Summary lecture 7 and literature - Motor control

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This is an extensive summary of the seventh lecture and corresponding literature about motor control of the course Neurocognition.

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October 25, 2021
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2021/2022
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25-10-2021 1



Table of content
Lecture 7 – Motor control......................................................................................................................1
The motor system: Hierarchy and neural components......................................................................1
The motor system: Perception and cognition.....................................................................................5
Movement disorders..........................................................................................................................6
Summary 7 – Motor control...................................................................................................................7
Chapter 14 – Brain control of movement...........................................................................................7
Haaland et al. (2017) – The neuropsychology of movement and movement disorders:
Neuroanatomical and cognitive considerations...............................................................................11


Lecture 7 – Motor control
The motor system: Hierarchy and neural components
Movement hierarchy
 Reflexes (lowest level)
˃ Fixed, rapid, automatic movements triggered in response to a specific sensory stimulus
˃ Little voluntary control, but can be modulated
 Automated movements
˃ Postural: combination of reflex and volition used to maintain an upright position with respect to
gravity
˃ Rhythmic: initiation and termination is voluntary, but the actual movement is more stereotyped
 Voluntary movements (highest level)
˃ Intentional, goal directed movements
˃ Initiated entirely from the CNS
˃ Performance improves with practices
˃ Reflex and postural movements compensate for the effects of the intended action

Muscle structure
 Muscles attach to the skeleton at the origin and insertion
 Muscles are collections of many muscle fibers
 function:
˃ Movement: muscles are organized into antagonistic pairs, with extensors extending the joint and
flexors contract the joint
˃ Proprioceptive information via muscle spindles and golgi tendon organs.




Lower motor neurons of spinal cord

, 25-10-2021 2


 Lower motor neurons project from the ventral horn of the spinal cord
˃ Alpha motor neurons cause contraction of the skeletal muscles
˃ Gamma motor neurons adjust the tension in the muscle spindle fibers so they can accurately detect a
stretch
 The motor unit is the alpha motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates

Spinal motor circuits: reflexes
 Reflexes are simple movements coordinated by the spinal cord
 Proprioceptors detect a stretch and trigger a motor response to counteract the stretch

Spinal motor circuits: central pattern generators
 Neurons within the spinal cord influence rhythmic behaviors.
˃ Excitatory interneurons stimulate alpha motor neurons to cause a muscle contraction
˃ Inhibitory interneurons are also stimulated, eventually overwhelming the excitation
˃ After a period of inactivity, excitation resumes
˃ Inhibitory interneurons cross the midline, causing alternating contraction and relaxation

Descending motor pathways
 Upper motor neurons from the primary motor cortex project to the spinal
cord
 About 80% of the axons of the upper motor neurons decussate at the
medulla, forming the lateral corticospinal tract
 About 10% decussate at the point where they exit the spinal cord
 The remainder remain ipsilateral




Motor cortex
 The primary motor cortex (M1) in the frontal lobe, anterior to the central sulcus
 M1 has a somatotopic organization, similar to S1




Cortical motor areas
 The lateral premotor area, supplementary motor are, and presupplementary area are anterior to M1
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