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JHU BME 580.422 Biological Systems II Going from vision to action: posterior parietal cortex

JHU BME 580.422 Biological Systems II Going from vision to action: posterior parietal cortex Descending tracts from the brain to the spinal cord Reza Shadmehr. Objects to the right of fixation fall on the left hemi-retina, and are processed by the left visual cortex. Visible object. thalamus.

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JHU BME 580.422 Biological Systems II Going from vision to action: posterior parietal cortex

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  1. JHU BME 580.422 Biological Systems II Going from vision to action: posterior parietal cortex Descending tracts from the brain to the spinal cord Reza Shadmehr

  2. Objects to the right of fixation fall on the left hemi-retina, and are processed by the left visual cortex. Visible object thalamus Visual cortex

  3. The dorsal visual stream: Where is the location of this object with respect to my body? The ventral visual stream: What is this object in my visual field?

  4. Descending tracts: send information from the brain to the spinal cord.

  5. anterior • Corticospinal tract • Origin: primary motor cortex (30%), Premotor (30%), somatosensory (30%) • About 1 million fibers in humans. • 90% cross at lower medulla: Right motor cortical areas control the left side of the body, specially distal muscles. • 10% do not cross • All are excitatory • Small diameter, slow conducting fibers Area 6: premotor cortex Area 4: motor cortex Areas 1,2,3: somatosensory cortex Red nucleus Dorsal column nuclei Medullary pyramidal decussation Lateral corticospinal tract Kandel ER et al. (1991)

  6. Split brain patients A small number of individuals have had their corpus callosum sectioned to relieve intractable epilepsy. In these individuals, information in the right visual field only goes to the left hemisphere. The two hemispheres: alien hand The period soon after the surgery, the split brain patient found that it often took her hours to get dressed in the morning because while her right hand would reach out and select an item to wear, her left hand would grab something else. She had trouble making the left hand follow her will. The clothes selected by this woman’s left hand were usually more colorful and flamboyant than those the woman hand “consciously” intended to wear. While one patient was holding a favorite book in his left hand, the right hemisphere (which controls the left hand but cannot read) orders the left hand to put down the book. R. Carter (1998) Mapping the Mind

  7. Left hemisphere has strong control over the contralateral arm and hand Left hemisphere some control over the ipsilateral proximal arm muscle Left hemisphere very little control over the ipsilateral hand muscle Split brain patient studies: 1. Left hemisphere has good control over the left proximal arm muscles: Subject is shown a cup in the right visual field. Information arrives in the left hemisphere. She is asked what she sees, and she answers “a cup”. She is asked to reach with the left arm towards the cup. She can reach with left arm normally. 2. Left hemisphere has very poor control over the left finger muscles: Subject is shown a hand posture in the right visual field and asked to copy it with the left hand. She cannot do so. Correct responses are seen for only the very basic gestures like making a fist. Gazzaniga (2000) Brain 123:1293.

  8. The two hemispheres: language center is usually in the left hemisphere Now a picture of a spoon is shown to the left of the dot. The picture goes to the right hemisphere. She is asked what she saw, and she says “nothing”. She says this because in nearly everyone, the language centers are in the left hemisphere. Because the left hemisphere has not been given the visual information, it says that it has seen nothing. However, when N.G. is asked to reach under a table with her left hand and select, by touch only, from among a group of concealed items the one that was the same as the one she had just seen, she picks a spoon. While she is holding the spoon under the table, she is asked what she is holding, she says “a pencil”.(R.W. Sperry 1968, American Psychologist 23:723-733) R. Carter (1998) Mapping the Mind

  9. Examination of the corticospinal tract Stimulation is used to activate the motor cortex, and cervical spine. Evoked EMG at biceps and hand muscle is recorded. Delay to biceps Delay to hand Eyre, JA et al. J Physiol 1991

  10. Reticulospinal tracts Large fiber axons. Control of posture and balance, acting on anti-gravity muscles. Pontine reticulospinal tract Excitatory synapses on leg extensors and arm flexors. Medullary reticulospinal tract Inhibitory synapses. Action is to reduce muscle tone for nearly all muscles of the upper and lower limbs. Carpenter MB (1985)

  11. Voluntary movements of our arm can have postural consequences. The brain predicts postural consequences of planned movements and acts to prevent loss of balance. Purves D. et al. (1997) Example of action of the pontine reticulospinal tract Bell sounds to initiate the lift. Biceps is activated after gastrocnemius. Cordo and Nashner, J Neurophysiol 1982

  12. Summary Visual objects to the right of fixation are processed predominately by the left visual cortex. However, because of the corpus callosum, this information is shared with the contralateral cerebral hemisphere. The corticospinal tract brings the output of the premotor cortex, primary motor cortex, and the somatosensory cortex. The corticospinal tract in the left brain controls the right arm, and the tract in the right brain controls the left arm. The function of the corticospinal tract is to control limb movements, particularly movements of the fingers. In the brainstem we have two important motor centers: pontine reticular nucleus and medullary reticular nucleus. These centers sent their output to the spinal cord via the pontine and medullary reticulospinal tracts. The function of the pontine center is to maintain our balance and posture. The function of the medullary center is to inhibit muscles, particularly during rest and sleep.

  13. Cells in the visual cortex have a “fixation-centered” receptive field Cells in the motor cortex encode direction of limb movement and forces Target Neuron receptive field T Neural discharge Fixation Hand trajectory during reaching T T

  14. When you point to a target, you align your finger with the retinal location of the target

  15. The problem of reaching: Where is the target of grasp? (integration of visual information on the retina with proprioceptive information from eye and head/neck muscles) Where is the gripper? (alignment of proprioception with vision) What are the task’s requirements (rewards and costs)? f xa xt xh q2 q1 Camera coordinate Proprioceptive coordinates

  16. Reaching errors in parietal lobe damage suggest a coding of space with respect to eye position and not body position 56 year old right handed male who suffered an infarct in the right hemisphere, frontal and parietal areas. Dijkerman et al. (2006) Neuropsychologia 44:2766.

  17. Difference vector (target location with respect to hand) Premotor cortex Example in slide 21 Fixation-centered location of hand Fixation-centered position of target Post. Parietal Cortex Examples in slides 18-20 Arm configuration in proprioceptive coordinates Eye and head orientation in proprioceptive coordinates Target on the retina

  18. Neurons in the PPC encode both image location and eye position 100 spikes/s Andersen RA et al. (1985) Science

  19. As eye position changes, the gain of the discharge on the receptive field changes Andersen RA et al. (1985) Science

  20. Head to the left Head to the right Activity (spikes/sec) Direction of stimulus (deg) PPC neurons are also sensitive to head position Brotchie et al. Science 1995

  21. Condition 2 Condition 1 1.0 sec Posterior parietal cortex neurons code for hand and target position in fixation-centered coordinates Despite the fact that both hand position and target position changed from condition 1 to 2, in fixation centered coordinates the position of the target with respect to fixation and position of hand with respect to fixation did not change. As a result, cell discharge did not change. Buneo C et al. (2002) Nature

  22. Summary Target location and hand position are computed by posterior parietal cortex cells in terms of vectors with respect to fixation point. These visual cues are represented with neurons that have receptive fields. Proprioceptive information from the arm, head, and eyes are used to estimate hand position with respect to fixation. Proprioceptive information from the head and eyes are combined with information about retinal location of the target to estimate target position with respect to fixation. Posterior parietal cortex neurons combine visual and proprioceptive information as a gain field. In a gain field, where neuronal response has a receptive field that is multiplicatively affected by a linear function that encodes proprioceptive information about location of the eyes or head.

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