4.7 Article

Linear summation of cat motor cortex outputs

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 26, Issue 20, Pages 5574-5581

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5332-05.2006

Keywords

population vector hypothesis; motor cortex; cortical circuits; directional motor control; motor cortical function; neuronal ensembles

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Recruitment of movement-related muscle synergies involves the functional linking of motor cortical points. Weasked how the outputs of two simultaneously stimulated motor cortical points would interact. To this end, experiments were done in ketamine-anesthetized cats. When prolonged (e.g., 500 ms) trains of intracortical microstimulation were applied in the primary motor cortex, stimulus currents as low as 10-20 mu A evoked coordinated movements of the contralateral forelimb. Paw kinematics in three dimensions and the electromyographic (EMG) activity of eight muscles were simultaneously recorded. We show that the EMG outputs of two cortical points simultaneously stimulated are additive. The movements were represented as displacement vectors pointing from initial to final paw position. The displacement vectors resulting from simultaneous stimulation of two cortical points pointed in nearly the same direction as the algebraic resultant vector. Linear summation of outputs was also found when inhibition at one of the cortical points was reduced by GABA(A) receptor antagonists. A simple principle emerges from these results. Notwithstanding the underlying complex neuronal circuitry, motor cortex outputs combine nearly linearly in terms of movement direction and muscle activation patterns. Importantly, simultaneous activation does not change the nature of the output at each point. An additional implication is that not all possible movements need be explicitly represented in the motor cortex; a large number of different movements may be synthesized from a smaller repertoire.

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