Cerebral cortex
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To further our understanding of the functional roles of different motor cortical areas, we made a quantitative comparison of the density of corticospinal projections from primary motor cortex (M1) and supplementary motor area (SMA) to spinal motor nuclei supplying hand and finger muscles in four macaque monkeys. We also compared the action of corticospinal outputs excited by electrical stimulation of these two areas on upper limb motoneurons recorded in three anaesthetized macaques. The hand representations of SMA and M1 were first identified using structural magnetic resonance imaging scans and intracortical microstimulation. ⋯ In most motoneurons (74/84) EPSPs had segmental latencies indicating that they were due to monosynaptic action of the I-wave. The results are consistent with cortico-motoneuronal (CM) connections originating from both SMA and M1 converging upon single motoneurons, but those from M1 are far more numerous and exert stronger excitatory effects than from the SMA. Thus although they may function in parallel, the two CM projections probably make different contributions to upper limb motor control.