Supplementary and pre motor areas Flashcards

1
Q

where are the SMA and PMA located

A

frontal lobe
rostral to M1

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2
Q

what are the 3 functionally distinct areas in the SMA and PMA

A

dorsal pre motor area (PMd)
ventral pre motor area (PMv)
supplementary motor area (SMA)

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3
Q

function of dorsal pre motor area (PMd)

A

planning and selection of goal directed voluntary mvmts
somatosensory feedback during ongoing mvmts

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4
Q

function of ventral pre motor area (PMv)

A

somatosensory, visual, auditory feedback during mvmts
hand shape for grasping, aligning the hand and mouth

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5
Q

function of supplementary motor area (SMA)

A

important for planning and selecting sequences of self initiated voluntary actions

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6
Q

what are the inputs into the SMA and PMA (3)

A

prefrontal cortex (PFC)
- selecting and planning voluntary motor actions
S1
- somatosensory feedback for the selection and guidance of motor actions
posterior parietal cortex (PPC)
- somatosensory and visual feedback for selection and guidance of motor actions

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7
Q

what is the somatotopic organisation of the SMA and PMA

A

more overlap in the representation of body areas compared to M1 and S1

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8
Q

what are the two main outputs from SMA and PMAs

A

outputs to cortical and subcortical structures

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9
Q

what are the ouputs to cortical structures responsible for

A

M1
- selection, planning, and initiation of a specific motor action amongst possible alternatives
PPC
- influence the processing and integration of somatosensory and visaul feedback during ongoing actions

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10
Q

what are the ouputs to subcortical structures responsible for

A

descending motor tracts
- to initiate and control voluntary motor actions (CSTs)
nuclei in basal ganglia and thalamus
- recurrent connections influence ongoing porcessing in the motor and PMA (basal ganglia-thalamocortical circuit)

connections are limited compared to projections from M1

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11
Q

what is the role of PMv (ventral pre motor area)

A

involved in the shaping of the hand for grasping mvmts

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12
Q

what are the two types of neurons present in the PMv

A

canonical PMv neurons
mirror neurons

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13
Q

what is the function of canonical neurons

A

respond to the presentation of an object
sensitive to object change and encode object shape for grasping
represent overall goal of action

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14
Q

what / when are canonical neurons sensitive

A

sensitive to goal of performing a precision grip regardless of whether it is performed with the left or right hand
- firing rate is slightly better when its performed with the contralateral hand
different neurons are sensitive to every type of grip and different postures / configurations of hands

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15
Q

what is the function of mirror neurons in the PMv

A

represent the overall goal of action
- selectively respond to different types of arm and hand mvmts regardless of whether the mvmts are performed by the subject or by watching someone else

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16
Q

what is the role of PMd (dorsal pre motor area)

A

selecting and planning motor mvmts
- selecting and performing and action when there are several alternatives
- also processes sensory feedback during ongoing voluntary actions

17
Q

what is the function of neurons in the PMd

A

neurons have a preferred direction (max activity)
- potential target locations are encoded in rostral PMd (less in caudal PMd)

18
Q

what is the difference between rostral and caudal PMd neurons

A

rostral = encodes potential action alternatives
rostral and caudal = plan and control ongoing reaching mvmts

19
Q

what are some of the lesser functions of the PMd

A

performing and simulating motor actions
important for simulating goal directed motor actions

20
Q

when is the PMd active

A

engaged in task regardless of whether action is performed or not
same preferred direction for action and observe only conditions
neuron fires when a reaching or observing a target in its preferred direction and inhibits firing when in anti preferred direction

21
Q

what is the function of the SMA (supplementary motor area)

A

selecting and executing self generating voluntary actions
- contrast with stimulus driven actions
postural stabilisation
- shifts in balance preceding voluntary mvmts
bimanual action
- coordinating mvmts of two arms

22
Q

what is the activity of SMA neurons

A

show selective activity when preparing for and performing familiar learned actions
- show little to no activity when performing unfamiliar sequences

23
Q

what occurs with damage to SMA

A

alien hand syndrome
- hand would hit and remove items from bag and throw them (involuntary)