Parieto-premotor Areas Mediate Directional Interference During Bimanual Movements
Open Access
- 1 October 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Cerebral Cortex
- Vol. 14 (10) , 1153-1163
- https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhh075
Abstract
In bimanual movements, interference emerges when limbs are moved simultaneously along incompatible directions. The neural substrate and mechanisms underlying this phenomenon are largely unknown. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to compare brain activation during directional incompatible versus compatible bimanual movements. Our main results were that directional interference emerges primarily within superior parietal, intraparietal and dorsal premotor areas of the right hemisphere. The same areas were also activated when the unimanual subtasks were executed in isolation. In light of previous findings in monkeys and humans, we conclude that directional interference activates a parieto-premotor circuit that is involved in the control of goal-directed movements under somatosensory guidance. Moreover, our data suggest that the parietal cortex might represent an important locus for integrating spatial aspects of the limbs’ movements into a common action. It is hypothesized to be the candidate structure from where interference arises when directionally incompatible movements are performed. We discuss the possibility that interference emerges when computational resources in these parietal areas are insufficient to code two incompatible movement directions independently from each other.Keywords
This publication has 78 references indexed in Scilit:
- The functional neuroanatomy of human working memory revisitedNeuroImage, 2003
- Neural Networks for the Coordination of the Hands in TimeJournal of Neurophysiology, 2003
- Neural Activity in Primary Motor and Dorsal Premotor Cortex In Reaching Tasks With the Contralateral Versus Ipsilateral ArmJournal of Neurophysiology, 2003
- Patterns of Bimanual Interference Reveal Movement Encoding within a Radial Egocentric Reference FrameJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2002
- Imaging the premotor areasCurrent Opinion in Neurobiology, 2001
- Visuo‐motor transformations for arm reachingEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 1998
- Spatial Coupling in the Coordination of Complex ActionsThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A, 1997
- Visuomotor Transformations for Reaching to Memorized Targets: A PET StudyNeuroImage, 1997
- Topographic representation in human intraparietal sulcus of reaching and saccadeNeuroReport, 1996
- Frontal lobe mechanisms subserving vision-for-action versus vision-for-perceptionBehavioural Brain Research, 1995