Title: Neuromotor Basis for Motor Control
1Chapter 4
- Neuromotor Basis for Motor Control
Concept The neuromotor system forms the
foundation for the control of movement
2Introduction
- The Neuromotor System
- Components of the central nervous system (CNS)
and peripheral nervous system (PNS) involved in
the control of coordinated movement - Focus of current chapter is CNS structure and
function - Chapter 6 will include PNS related structure and
function for tactile, visual, and proprioceptive
sensory systems
3The Neuron
- General Structure see Fig. 4.1
- Cell body
- Contains nucleus
- Dendrites
- Extensions from cell body range from 1 to
thousands per neuron - Receive information from other cells
- Axon (also known as a nerve fiber)
- Extension from cell body one per neuron with
branches (known as collaterals) - Sends information from neuron
- Neuron Nerve cell
- Basic component of the nervous system
- Range in size from 4 to 100 microns
4Types and Functions of Neurons
- Three Types of Neurons
- 1. Sensory Neurons see Fig. 4.2
- Also known as afferent neurons
- Send information to CNS from sensory receptors
- Unipolar 1 axon no dendrites
- Cell body and most of the axon located in PNS
only axon central process enters CNS
5Types and Functions of Neurons, contd
- 2. Motor Neurons see Fig. 4.2
- Also known as efferent neurons
- Two types influence voluntary movement
- 1. Alpha motor neurons
- Predominantly in spinal cord axons synapse on
skeletal muscles - 2. Gamma motor neurons
- In intrafusal fibers of skeletal muscles
6Types and Functions of Neurons, contd
- 3. Interneurons see Fig. 4.2
- Specialized neurons that originate and terminate
in the brain or spinal cord - Function as connections between
- Axons from the brain and synapse on motor
neurons - Axons from sensory nerves and the spinal nerves
ascending to the brain
7Central Nervous System (CNS)
- Two components Brain and spinal cord
- The Brain
- 4 structural components most directly involved in
the control of voluntary movement - 1. Cerebrum
- 2. Diencephalon
- 3. Cerebellum
- 4. Brainstem
8Brain Components 1. Cerebrum
- One of two components of forebrain
- Two halves
- Right cerebral hemisphere
- Left cerebral hemisphere
- Covered by cerebral cortex
- Gray tissue 2- to 5-mm thick
- Undulating covering of
- Ridges each is called a gyrus
- Grooves each is called a sulcus
- Cortex motor neurons
- Pyramidal cells
- Nonpyramidal cells
Connected by the corpus callosum
9Cerebral Cortex
- Four lobes
- Frontal
- Parietal
- Occipital
- Temporal
- Sensory cortex
- Posterior to central sulcus
- Receives neuron axons specific to type of sensory
information
Named according to nearest skull bone
10Cerebral Cortex, contd
- Association areas see Fig. 4.4
- Location
- Adjacent to specific sensory areas of sensory
cortex - Function
- To associate information from the several
different sensory cortex areas - Allow the interaction between perceptual and
higher-order cognitive functions - e.g., selection of the correct response in a
choice-RT situation - Possible locations for transition between
perception and action
11Cerebral Cortex, contd
- Location Structure
- Frontal lobe just anterior to central sulcus
- Contains motor neurons that send axons to
skeletal muscles
- Function
- Involved in control of
- Initiation and coordination of movements for fine
motor skills - Postural coordination
12Cerebral Cortex, contd
- Premotor area
- Location Anterior to the primary motor cortex
- Functions include
- Organization of movements before they are
initiated - Rhythmic coordination during movement
- -- enables transitions between sequential
movements of a serial motor skill (e.g. keyboard
typing, piano playing) - Control of movement based on observation of
another persons performing a skill
13Cerebral Cortex, contd
- Supplementary motor area (SMA)
- Location Medial surface of frontal lobe adjacent
to portions of the primary motor cortex - Functions include involvement in the control of
- Sequential movements
- Preparation and organization of movement
14Cerebral Cortex, contd
- Parietal lobe
- Location
- One of the 4 lobes of the cerebral cortex
- Function
- Involved in the integration of movement
preparation and execution - Interacts with the premotor cortex, primary motor
cortex, and SMA before and during movement
15Subcortical Brain Area Important in Motor Control
- Basal Ganglia
- Buried within cerebral hemispheres
- Consist of 4 large nuclei
- Caudate nucleus
- Putamen
- Substantia nigra
- Globus pallidus
- Function involves control of
- Movement initiation
- Antagonist muscles
- during movement
- Force
- Receive info from cerebral cortex and
brainstem - Send info to brainstem
16Basal Ganglia, contd
- Parkinsons Disease
- Common disease associated with basal ganglia
dysfunction - Lack of dopamine production by substantia nigra
- Motor control problems BART
- Bradykinesia (slow movement)
- Akinesia (reduced amount of movement)
- Rigidity of muscles
- Tremor
17Brain Components 2. Diencephalon
- 2nd component of forebrain
- Contains two groups of nuclei
- Thalamus
- Functions
- A type of relay station - receives and integrates
sensory info from spinal cord and brainstem
sends info to cerebral cortex - Important role in control of attention, mood, and
perception of pain - Hypothalamus
- Critical center for the control of the endocrine
system and body homeostasis
18Brain Components 3. Cerebellum
- Location Behind cerebrum and attached to
brainstem See Fig. 4.3 - Structure includes
- Cortex covering
- Two hemispheres
- White matter under the cortex contains
- Red nucleus Where cerebellums motor neural
pathways connect to spinal cord - Oculomotor nucleus
19Brain Components 3. Cerebellum contd
- Functions
- Involved in control of smooth and accurate
movements - Clumsy movement results from dysfunction
- Involved in control of eye-hand coordination,
movement timing, posture - Serves as a type of movement error detection and
correction system - Receives copy of motor neural signals sent from
motor cortex to muscles (efference copy) - Involved in learning motor skills
20Brain Components 4. Brainstem
- Location
- Beneath cerebrum connected to spinal cord
- 3 components involved in motor control
- Pons
- Medulla
- Reticular formation
- Functions
- Pons
- Involved in control of various body functions
(e.g. chewing) and balance - Medulla
- Regulatory center for internal physiologic
processes (e.g. breathing) - Reticular formation
- Integrator of sensory and motor info
- Inhibits / Activates neural signals to skeletal
muscles
21Spinal Cord
- A complex neural system vitally involved in motor
control - Structure See Fig. 4.5
- Gray matter H-shaped central portion
- Consists of cell bodies and axons of neurons
- Two pairs of horns
- Dorsal (posterior) horns Cells transmit sensory
info - Ventral (anterior) horns Contains alpha motor
neurons with axons terminating on skeletal muscle - Interneurons (Renshaw cells) In ventral horn
22Sensory Neural Pathways
- Several neural tracts (called ascending tracts)
- Pass through spinal cord and brainstem
- Connect to sensory areas of cerebral cortex and
cerebellum - 2 tracts to sensory cortex especially important
for motor control - Dorsal column
- Anterolateral system
- Tract to cerebellum important for motor control
- Spinocerebellar tract Primary pathway for
proprioceptive info
23Motor Neural Pathways
- Descending tracts
- Travel from brain through spinal cord
- Pyramidal tracts (corticospinal tracts)
- 60 from motor cortex
- Most fibers cross to other side body
(decussation) in medulla of brainstem - Involved in control of fine motor skill
performance - Nonpyramidal tracts (brainstem pathways)
- Fibers do not cross to other side of body
- Involved in postural control and control of hand
and finger flexion extension
24The Motor Unit
- An alpha motor neuron and all the skeletal muscle
fibers it innervates See Figure 4.6 - When a motor neuron activates (fires) all its
connected muscle fibers contract - The ultimate end of the motor neural information
- 200,000 alpha motor neurons in spinal cord
- Number of muscle fibers served by a motor unit
depends on type of movement associated with the
muscle - Fine movements
- e.g. eye muscles 1 fiber / motor unit
- Gross movements
- e.g. posture control many fibers (up to 700)
/ motor unit
25Motor Unit Recruitment
- Amount of force generated by muscle contraction
depends on number of muscle fibers activated - To increase force, need more motor units
- Process of increasing number of motor units
involved recruitment - Recruitment follows size principle
- Size motor neuron cell body diameter
- Size principle recruit smallest motor units
first (i.e., weakest force produced) then
systematically increase size recruited until
achieve desired force
26From Intent to Action The Neural Control of
Voluntary Movement
- Think about the entire process of deciding to
perform a skill and actually performing it - The neural activity involved in this process
typically follows a hierarchical organization
pattern - From higher to lower levels of the neuromuscular
system - This process is described conceptually in Figure
4.7 and Table 4.1
27Neural Control of Voluntary Movement
- 1. Higher centers
- Function - Form complex plans according to
intent, communicates with the middle level via
command neurons. - Structures areas involved with memory and
emotions, SMA, associations cortex - 2. Middle level -
- Function converts plans to a number of smaller
motor programs which determine the pattern of
neural activation required. - Structures sensorimotor cortex, cerebellum,
basal nuclei, brainstem nuclei - Lowest level
- Function specifies tension of particular
muscles and angle of joints at specific times
necessary to carry out programs from middle
control level - Structures brainstem or spinal cord
28From Intent to Action Brain Structures
Associated with Movement
- Research by Carson and Kelso (2004)
- Demonstrated there is more involved in
understanding how we control voluntary
coordinated movement than knowing which brain
structures involved in which type of movements - Cognitive intention is a critical component
- Experiment
- Participants performed finger-flexion movement to
a metronome - On the beat (synchronize)
- Between beats (syncopate)
- Task involved exactly the same movement but two
different cognitive intentions - fMRI results showed
- Different brain regions active for the two
movement intentions