Lecture 13: Motor Control: Psychology 110: Biological Psychology
Lecture 13: Motor Control: Psychology 110: Biological Psychology
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Outline
• we will then look at the hierarchy of processing that exists in the motor
system, beginning with spinal reflexes, and continuing to look at the
primary motor cortex, and motor association cortices.
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Muscles
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Muscle fibers
Muscle fibers consist of two types of interlocking protein – actin and myosin.
During contraction the myosin heads bind to actin, and then bend to slide
filaments past one another, shortening the muscle.
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Types of muscle fiber
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Innervation of muscle fiber
Motoneurons leave the ventral root of the spinal cord and branch multiple
times before synapsing with individual muscle fibers at the neuromuscular
junction.
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Innervation ratio
For example, the muscles involved in eye movements have about one
motoneuron for every three muscle fibers (1:3 innervation ratio), while
those for the leg have one motoneuron controlling several hundred fibers
(~1:300). 8
Motoneuron recruitment
Large motoneurons have wide diameter axons to conduct impulses fast, but
are difficult to initially excite.
Small motoneurons have small axons and conduct impulses slowly, but are
easy to initially excite.
SIZE PRINCIPLE:
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Sensory feedback (proprioception)
There are two proprioceptive sensory structures that are associated with
muscles:
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Muscle spindles
If the muscle fiber is stretched this stretches the nerve fiber and causes
the nerve to fire action potentials.
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Spinal reflexes: the stretch reflex
1. Weight is placed in
subject’s hand.
2. MA is stretched.
3. SNA is excited.
4. SNA connects
monosynaptically with
MNA exciting the
stretched muscle.
5. Via an interneuron,
SNA also inhibits MNB
ensuring that the
antagonistic muscle
(MB) is relaxed when
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MA is contracted.
Muscle spindles: efferent nerves
Muscle spindles also receive input from efferent nerves called gamma
motoneurons (alpha motoneurons go to main muscle fibers).
The importance of this system is reflected in the fact that 30% of all
motoneurons are gamma.
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Golgi tendon organ
Golgi tendon organs detect stretch in the tendon, not the muscle, and are
sensitive to contraction.
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Outline
• we will then look at the hierarchy of processing that exists in the motor
system, beginning with spinal reflexes, and continuing to look at the
primary motor cortex, and motor association cortices (premotor cortex
and the supplementary motor area.
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Spinal reflexes
An animal with damage to its spinal cord is still capable of many complex
behaviors. For example, the animal can often stand, and if stimulated, walk
as well.
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Corticospinal pathway
Consists of motoneurons that travel from the motor cortex, through the
brainstem, and down the spinal cord.
Cross over in the medulla so that the left motor cortex controls the right side
of the body and vice versa.
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Primary motor cortex (M1)
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Spot the difference?
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Muscles or movements?
Monkey must move joystick from central location to one of eight peripheral
locations (indicate by yellow dot), but by altering the monkey’s hand
orientation, one can alter which muscles are used to make the movement.
One third of M1 neurons encode which muscles are used, one half encode the
movement direction irrespective of the muscles used. 21
Premotor cortices
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LPC: involvement in conditional learning
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LPC: involvement in conditional learning
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LPC: involvement in conditional learning
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Medial premotor cortex (MPC)
NO CUE CUED
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Medial premotor cortex (MPC)
• when the subject mentally rehearses the complex movement, the area of
activation is restricted to MPC
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Motor system organization: functional hierarchy
PREFRONTAL
Rules, strategies
MEDIAL PREMOTOR
LATERAL PREMOTOR
Internally generated
Externally cued actions
actions
PRIMARY MOTOR
Movements, muscles
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Brain-machine interface
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Brain-machine interface (BMI)
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