lecture 8 - brain and muscles Flashcards

1
Q

cerebellum

A

interact w sensorimotor hierarchy. coordinate and modulate.
important for sequence motor learning.
compares M1, M2, motor signals from brain stem and somatosensory, vestibular systems
complex = 10% mass, 50% neurons.
also sensory, cognitive and emotional function.

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2
Q

cerebellar damage

A

devestates motor function. no precise control of direction, force, velocity. no adaptation to changign conditions

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3
Q

basal ganglia

A

interact with sensrimotor hierarchy
coordinate, modulate cortical activity. interconnect sensory and motor areas. role in high level cognition.

motor loop : cortical input -> BG -> thalamus -> motor cortex

cognitive - procedural/habit learning

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4
Q

2 major dorsolateral tracts

A

dorsolateral corticospinal tract

dorsolateral corticorubrospinal tract

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5
Q

dorsolateral corticospinal tract

A

direct
voluntary movement
m1 –> medulla (decussate) –> directly synapse on motor neurons of distal muscles.
only present in animals that can move digits independently
betz cells!

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6
Q

betz cells

A

large pyramidal cells in M1. axon at base of neocortex. terminate in lower regions of spinal cord on leg motor neurons. involved in rapid and powerful voluntary leg movements.

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7
Q

dorsolateral corticorubrospinal tract

A

indirect.
M1 –> red nucleus (decussate) –> medulla.
some terminate on trigeminal nerves, others to interneurons which innervate motor neurons of distal muscles.

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8
Q

2 major ventromedial tracts

A

ventromedial corticospinal tract

ventromedial cortico-brainstem-spinal tract

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9
Q

ventromedial corticospinal tract

A

direct
posture and locomotion - well learned task.
descend ipsilaterally, branches diffusely - no decussation. innervated both sides of spinal grey matter

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10
Q

ventromedial cortico-brainstem-spinal tract

A

indirect
feed into complex network of brain stem structures
each side carries both hemispheres. synapse on several spinal cord segments - control proximal trunk and limbs

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11
Q

brainstem structures in VM CBS tract

A

tectum - auditory (inferior colliuli - sound localization), and visual (superior colliculi - eye movement)
vestibular nucleus - balance, contributes to cerebellum
reticular formation - motor programs for complex species - specific movements.
well learned reflexes.
motor nuclei of cranial nerves - control facial muscles

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12
Q

similarities in dorsal and ventral tracts

A

project from M1
mediate voluntary movement
each composed of 2 tracts.

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13
Q

differences btw dorsal and ventral tracts

A

ventral more diffuse. activate proximal muscles. posture and whole body movement. species- specific activity.
doral - terminate contralateraly. activate distal muscles. limb movements. redundancy in tracts.

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14
Q

define motor unit

A

single motor neuron -> all fibers innervated.
neuron fires ALL muscle fibers of motor unit.
different number of muscle fibers innervated by each motor neruon. fewer fibers = more selective motor control.

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15
Q

skeletal muscles - direction of force, mtoor end plate

A

generate force in one direction only - contract muscle. * need opposing muscle group for opposite function
motor end plate = on each muscle fiber, activated by acetylcholine. activation contracts fiber

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16
Q

2 muscle fiber tyeps

A

fast - white
not highly vascularized. contract and relax quickly. tire quickly

slow - dark
highly vascularized. weaker, slower. sustained contraction = maintain activity indefinitely

17
Q

2 categories of muscles required

A

flexor - bend/flex

extensor - straighten /extend

18
Q

synergistic vs antagonistic muscles

A
synergistic = contraction produce same movement (either side of joint)
antogonistic = contraction produce opposing movement (on same side of joint
19
Q

2 types of contraction

A

isometric contraction: increased tention on tendon. no shortening/contraction of muscle. jsut hold

dynamic contraction: contraction followed by lengthening. movement

20
Q

tension increased by

A

increse number of neurons firing

increasing firing rates of neurons.

21
Q

monitor muscle tension

A

golgi tendon organ.
embedded in tendon. more tension - more pull on tendon.
high tension = feedback to inhibitory interneuron in spinal cord causes muscle to relax. other muscles increase contraction to make up for that

22
Q

monitor muscle length

A

muscle spindle. embedded in intrafusal muscle in extrafusal muscle. extrafusal muscle contract, so do inrafusal - muscle spindle detect shortening.

23
Q

stretch reflex

A

monosynaptic.
hit = tug tendon = lengthen of muscle. in response contract = kick.
muscle spindle sensory afferent nerves fire - cause gentral horn motor neruons to fire = kick.

24
Q

withdrawal reflex

A

suddenly pull back when touch something painful
not monosynaptic. 1.6 msec to cross 2 synapses. one interneuron.
higher centres also turned on - multisynaptic - to deal with withdrawal.

25
Q

reciprocal innervation

A

antagonistic muscle pairs counter-contract. allow for smooth & quick movements

26
Q

recurrent collateral inhibition - renshaw cells

A

renshaw cell = small interneuron. motor neuron synapses on muscle AND renshaw. renshaw then inhibits motor neuron to silence it. = negative feedback loop to give itself rest.

27
Q

walking as a reflex

A

reflex must be plastic - adjust to output.

with severed spinal cord, idnividual can walk when they have sensory feedback.

28
Q

comple movements moved down to lower areas. so high areas?

A

high areas inform of goals and help with intentions but dont carry out reflex.

29
Q

motor equivalence

A

sensorimotor system is plastic.
motor equivalence - same baasic movement carried out in multiple ways with different muscles
writing with hand or toe = similar font bc of motor equivalence

30
Q

sensorimotor doesnt need conscious perception, just needs …

A

sensory feedback.

ebbinghaus illusion - consciously perceived differently, but sensorimotor preps finger gap to be same size.

31
Q

species specific behaviours without practice & without limbs

A
  • so engrained that they do same behaviour in same sequence to a tee. use alternate sensory feedback when missing limb.
32
Q

central sensorimotor programs with practice

A

response chunking - learn sequence as a chunk

shift control lower levels- advantageous, frees up higher levels, greater speed at lower level, more parallel processing

33
Q

sensorimotor learning

A

well -practiced sequence - shift sequence knowledge down to lower areas. hgiher association areas freed up.