• Neuroscience · Oct 2016

    Review

    Parieto-frontal gradients and domains underlying eye and hand operations in the action space.

    • Alexandra Battaglia-Mayer, Lucy Babicola, and Eleonora Satta.
    • Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, SAPIENZA University of Rome, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, 00185 Rome, Italy. Electronic address: alexandra.battagliamayer@uniroma1.it.
    • Neuroscience. 2016 Oct 15; 334: 76-92.

    AbstractIn monkeys, motor intention in its different forms emerges from a parietal-frontal gradient of visual, eye and hand signals, containing discrete dominant domains. These are formed by areas sharing cortical connections and functional properties. Within this gradient, the combination of different inputs determines the tuning properties of neurons, while local and long cortico-cortical connections shape the structure and temporal delays of the network. The pathways linking similar functional domains in parietal and frontal cortex sculpt information processing systems related to different functions, all requiring eye-hand coordination. fMRI experiments show that similar gradients lay at the core of cognitive-motor control in humans as well. This eye-hand matrix provides a framework to address, within a unitary frame, not only basic forms of motor behavior, such as reaching and grasping, but also actions of increasing complexity, such as interception of moving targets, tool use, construction of complex objects, maze analysis and solution, among others. The organization of the cerebral cortex into functional gradients and domains, beyond frontal and parietal cortices, is common to other brain regions, such as prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, and does not support views of the parieto-frontal operations based on specific and strictly segregated eye and hand modules. These can only be found at the eye and hand motor output domains in the frontal cortex, that is in the frontal eye fields and in the primary motor cortex, respectively.Copyright © 2016. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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