L26 Flashcards

1
Q

where does the preMC project to mainly

A

M1 and some direct connections with the hand muscles

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2
Q

what is the PreMC purpose

A

selection of appropriate motor plans (using sensory feedback)

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3
Q

what do the cell bodies with in the preMC signal

A

preparation for movement (motor set neurons)
and incorrect actions

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4
Q

what do the cell bodies within the preMC integrate

A

sensory aspects for motor acts regardless of how it was detected

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5
Q

when do premotor neurons fire

A

once the movement instructions are given (preparatory)

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6
Q

what does it mean by the preMC priming

A

lowers the threshold for the appropriate M1 neurons to fire

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7
Q

what occurs when there is damage to the premotor cortex

A

difficulty performing movements in response to verbal or visual commands. However, the individual can still respond to these commands in different settings

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8
Q

purpose of the supplementary motor area (SMA)

A

programming and initiation of complex movements using prior or remembered sequences of movements

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9
Q

the cell bodies within the SMA respond to…

A

sequence of movements
mental rehearsal of sequence movements

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10
Q

what are the cell bodies of the SMA involved in creating

A

an appropriate dynamic or complex motor output

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11
Q

monitoring the activity of the different motor areas using PET scan what would be seen when a task is simple

A

M1 and S1 firing

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12
Q

monitoring the activity of the different motor areas using PET scan what would be seen when a task is complex

A

M1, S1 and SMA

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13
Q

monitoring the activity of the different motor areas using PET scan what would be seen when a task is though of

A

SMA only

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14
Q

where does the association cortex receive input from

A

multiple sensory sources then projects to the premotor cortex and SMA

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15
Q

why is the association cortex necessary

A

ensures adaptive movements

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16
Q

what are the two major areas the association cortex consists of

A

posterior parietal cortex for integrating sensory
prefrontal cortex for working memory especially memory of consequences to actions

17
Q

what occurs when there is damage to the association cortex

A

deficits in the perception and memory of spatial relationships

18
Q

what is Apraxia

A

occurs when there is damage to the association cortex.
- is the disorder of voluntary movement not by paralysis or comprehension
- difficulty performing a movement out of context but can perform it naturally

19
Q

what is contralateral neglect

A

happens when there is damage to the association cortex.
- inability to respond to stimuli on one side of the body contralateral to the lesion
- unaware of issue

20
Q

draw a simple breakdown of voluntary movement of cortexes/areas of the brain and what they are doing

A

association - sma - preMC - M1 - spinal cord

experience - strategy - priming (sensory) - execution - movement via MU recruitment

21
Q

what does it mean for somatotopic organization in motor cortex to be plastic

A

can alter the somatotopy with motor learning after injury to now allow neighboring areas to become larger if one area is not being used