Motor Control Flashcards

1
Q

Outline reflex movements

A

Rapid reproducible autonomic motor responses to external stimulus
Employs simple neural circuit involving peripheral nerves and spinal cord
Does not require involvement of higher brain centres

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2
Q

Outline voluntary movements

A

Wide variety of movements of varying speed, duration, and complexity
Typically involves complex patterns of sensory and motor processing
Initiated on demand in brain and mainly higher centres involved

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3
Q

Outline the 5 steps involved in a stretch reflex

A

Stimulation of a receptor
Activation of a sensory neuron
Information processing in the CNS
Activation of a motor neuron
Response of a peripheral effector

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4
Q

Outline mechanical ion channel gating

A

Muscle stretch receptors (proprioceptors) have mechanically gated ion channels. When stretched, channel opens, allows entry of positive charge, local depolarisation ensues, called receptor potential. If big enough, action potential will be triggered in sensory nerve and information will flow from site of stimulation

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5
Q

Outline the 5 steps of a withdrawal reflex

A

Simulation of a receptor
Activation of a sensory neuron
Information processing in CNS
Activation of a motor neuron
Response of a peripheral effector

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6
Q

Outline the pathway of voluntary movement

A

Sensory receptors stimulated
Sensory afferent devision PNS carries information
Information processing in CNS
Motor efferent devision of PNS - Somatic nervous system
Skeletal muscle effector

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7
Q

Outline the hierarchy of motor complexity, low to height

A

Brain stem and spinal cord
Pons and medulla oblongata
Hypothalamus
Thalamus and midbrain
Basal nuclei
Cerebellum
Cerebral cortex

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8
Q

What are the roles of the brain stem and spinal cord

A

Control simple cranial and spinal reflexes

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9
Q

What are the roles of the pons and oblongata

A

Control balance reflexes an more complex respiratory reflexes

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10
Q

what are the roles of the hypothalamus

A

Control reflex motor patterns related to eating, drinking, and sexual activity. Modifies respiratory reflexes

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11
Q

What are the roles of the thalamus and midbrain

A

Control reflexes in response to visual stimuli and auditory stimuli

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12
Q

What are the roles of the basal nuclei

A

Modify voluntary and reflexive motor patterns at the subconscious level

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13
Q

What are thee roles of the cerebellum

A

Coordinates complex motor patterns through feedback loops

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14
Q

What are the main functions of he cerebral cortex

A

Plans and initiates voluntary motor activity

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15
Q

What is the prefrontal cortex

A

Organises thoughts and actions
Intimately involved in “executive functions”

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16
Q

What functions is the prefrontal cortex involved in

A

Congestive function - acquiring knowledge through thought and experience
Social behaviour - planning, language, decision making, risk assessment, personality, emotion
Used to recall and consider information - not currently available from environment
Recall of past events - can be used to help plan future events

17
Q

What is the primary cortex

A

Upper motor neurons that initiate complex voluntary movements

18
Q

Summarise voluntary movements

A

Sensory info about environment ant state of body is used to plan movements. Neural commands sent to muscles to generate forces to execute movement
Desire to initiate a movement typically arises in association and pre frontal cortex
Various directly motor related regions of cortex are activated
Descending pathways (to brain stem and spinal cord) are activated
Spinal cord motor neurons activate skeletal muscles
Sensory information fed back into system, and the activity of motor neurons is modulated to modify and control the movement

19
Q

Outline the planning of a movement

A

Decision in frontal lobes
Prefrontal cortex prepares and executes movements of limbs
Basal nuclei allows different areas of brain to work together. Manages singles brain sends
Cerebellum involved in making postural adjustments to maintain balance