Epicortical Electrical Mapping of Motor Areas in Primates
- 28 September 2007
- book chapter
- Published by Wiley
- Vol. 132, 5-20
- https://doi.org/10.1002/9780470513545.ch2
Abstract
The neocortical motor areas of monkeys were discovered by epicortical electrical stimulation. Ferrier in 1875 drew non-overlapping circles for face, limbs and tail. His 'centres' were postcentral as well as precentral. In the 1880s Horsley added an arm and face area on the medical surface (where Penfield's supplementary motor area is now ensconced). At the turn of the century the newborn science of cortical architectonics discovered striking differences between precentral and postcentral areas. Sherrington got no responses from the postcentral gyrus of apes. At mid-century, however, Woolsey reinstated the postcentral motor map (his Sm 1). The discrepancies between these classical maps could probably be explained by sensitivity to levels of anaesthesia and to arbitrarily chosen configurations of stimuli whose intracortical actions remained obscure. Some of the modes of action of epicortical stimulation have since been worked out. These are relevant to the results of electrical and magnetic stimulation of the human brain through scalp and skull. Today's research is differentiating the functions of the precentral and postcentral areas (4, 6PM, 6SMA, 3a, 3b, 1): at the microscopic level, by studies of sampled neurons whose discharges can be related to specific components of learnt motor performances, and whose connectivities can be traced by electroanatomical and microscopical labelling of their perikarya, axons and synapses; at the macroscopic level, by studies of Bereitschaftspotential and regional cerebral metabolism in motor performances in intact humans.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Different sites of action of electrical and magnetic stimulation of the human brainNeuroscience Letters, 1987
- A method of monitoring function in corticospinal pathways during scoliosis surgery with a note on motor conduction velocities.Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1986
- Lateral spread of neuronal activity within the motor cortex investigated with intracellular responses to distant epicortical stimulation.The Japanese Journal of Physiology, 1985
- Vertical spread of neuronal activity within the cat motor cortex investigated with epicortical stimulation and intracellular recording.The Japanese Journal of Physiology, 1985
- THE FUNCTIONAL ORGANIZATION OF THE MOTOR SYSTEM IN THE MONKEYBrain, 1968
- The Pyramidal Projection to Motoneurones of Some Muscle Groups of the Baboon's ForelimbPublished by Elsevier ,1964
- THRESHOLDS OF CORTICAL REPRESENTATIONBrain, 1950
- The Linacre Lecture ON THE FUNCTION OF THE SO-CALLED MOTOR AREA OF THE BRAIN: Delivered to the Master and Fellows of St. John's College, Cambridge, May 6th, 1909BMJ, 1909
- VI. A record of the results obtained, by electrical excitation of the so-called motor cortex and internal capsule in an orang-outang (Simia satyrus)Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. (B.), 1890
- I. A record of experiments upon the functions of the cerebral cortexPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. (B.), 1888