4.4 Article

Visuomotor Cerebellum in Human and Nonhuman Primates

Journal

CEREBELLUM
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages 392-410

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12311-010-0204-7

Keywords

Flocculus; Uvula/Nodulus; Oculomotor vermis; Eyemovements; fMRI

Categories

Funding

  1. Dutch Organization for Medical Sciences (ZonMw)
  2. Life Sciences (ALW)
  3. Senter (Neuro-Bsik)
  4. Prinses Beatrix Fonds (JvdG)
  5. SENSOPAC
  6. CEREBNET
  7. European Community

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In this paper, we will review the anatomical components of the visuomotor cerebellum in human and, where possible, in non-human primates and discuss their function in relation to those of extracerebellar visuomotor regions with which they are connected. The floccular lobe, the dorsal paraflocculus, the oculomotor vermis, the uvula-nodulus, and the ansiform lobule are more or less independent components of the visuomotor cerebellum that are involved in different corticocerebellar and/or brain stem olivocerebellar loops. The floccular lobe and the oculomotor vermis share different mossy fiber inputs from the brain stem; the dorsal paraflocculus and the ansiform lobule receive corticopontine mossy fibers from postrolandic visual areas and the frontal eye fields, respectively. Of the visuomotor functions of the cerebellum, the vestibulo-ocular reflex is controlled by the floccular lobe; saccadic eye movements are controlled by the oculomotor vermis and ansiform lobule, while control of smooth pursuit involves all these cerebellar visuomotor regions. Functional imaging studies in humans further emphasize cerebellar involvement in visual reflexive eye movements and are discussed.

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