Journal Article10.1146/ANNUREV-NEURO-062111-150509
Cortical control of arm movements: a dynamical systems perspective.
TL;DR: How a dynamical systems perspective may help to understand why neural activity evolves the way it does, how neural activity relates to movement parameters, and how a unified conceptual framework may result are reviewed.
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Abstract: Our ability to move is central to everyday life Investigating the neural control of movement in general, and the cortical control of volitional arm movements in particular, has been a major research focus in recent decades Studies have involved primarily either attempts to account for single-neuron responses in terms of tuning for movement parameters or attempts to decode movement parameters from populations of tuned neurons Even though this focus on encoding and decoding has led to many seminal advances, it has not produced an agreed-upon conceptual framework Interest in understanding the underlying neural dynamics has recently increased, leading to questions such as how does the current population response determine the future population response, and to what purpose? We review how a dynamical systems perspective may help us understand why neural activity evolves the way it does, how neural activity relates to movement parameters, and how a unified conceptual framework may result
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Citations
Neuronal dynamics of signal selective motor plan cancellation in the macaque dorsal premotor cortex
Giarrocco Franco,Bardella Giampiero,Giamundo Margherita,Fabbrini Francesco,Brunamonti Emiliano,Pani Pierpaolo,Ferraina Stefano +6 more
TL;DR: It is found that movement generation is characterized by neuronal dynamics that evolve between subspaces that are predictive of how the dorsal premotor cortex of macaque monkeys processes inhibitory signals, allowing the classification of the resulting behavioral strategy.
Bringing the Dynamics of Movement under Control
TL;DR: It is shown that a recurrent network whose spontaneous activity is stabilized by learning reproduces many aspects of preparatory and movement-related activity.
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The whole prefrontal cortex is premotor cortex.
TL;DR: In this paper, the prefrontal cortex is seen as a premotor abstraction hierarchy whose core function is the potentiation and depotentiation of possible action plans at different levels of granularity.
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