250 likes | 433 Views
Movements and actions Chapter 11. Movements vs actions. Movements are brief unitary activities of muscle Reflexes Postural adjustments Sensory orientation Actions are complex, goal-oriented sets of movements Walking Gestures Acquired skills (speech, tool use, etc.).
E N D
Movements vs actions • Movements are brief unitary activities of muscle • Reflexes • Postural adjustments • Sensory orientation • Actions are complex, goal-oriented sets of movements • Walking • Gestures • Acquired skills (speech, tool use, etc.)
There is a complex relationship between movements and actions Old idea was that actions are collections of reflexes chained together Counterexamples abound: Spooner’s ‘Queer old dean’
Control systems theory and movement • Closed-loop movements: Information flows from whatever is being controlled back to the device that controls it • Open-loop movements: Ballistic movements where once movement is initiated, there is no opportunity for feedback – accuracy is controlled through anticipation of error.
Muscles control the actions of the skeletal system -antagonists -synergists
Innervation ratios and neural integration Motor unit=a single motor axon and all muscle fibres it innervates Innervation ratio = # motorneurons/#muscle fibres High innervation ratio means each motorneuron innervates only a few muscle fibres (oculomotor or finger muscle) Low innervation ratio means each motorneuron innervates many muscle fibres (leg)
The importance of sensory feedback Proprioception=information about body movements and positions “Pride and a Daily Marathon” -patient with viral infection that attacked parts of dorsal roots that gave kinesthetic information -had to completely relearn to move in a new way that depended on visual feedback (turn off lights – falls down)
Muscle spindles signal muscle lengthGolgi tendon organs signal muscle tension
John Hughlings-Jackson and the motor system as the Royal Navy The royal navy is organized as a hierarchy, but each level has some autonomy -if the admiral dies, all the ships on the sea don’t suddenly stop The motor system is organized as a hierarchy, but each level in the hierarchy has some autonomy -if the hierarchy is beheaded, we don’t stop all movement
Spinal reflexes mediate automatic responses -withdrawal, stretch, scratch are movements organized at the spinal level -animals with spinal cord transections can support weight and even generate some of the patterned muscular contractions required for walking
Brainstem organization for movement: The extrapyramidal system Decorticate animals can still move: Walking, feeding, grooming, sexual behaviour are all, in some ways, intact Circuitry involved is mostly in the reticular formation of the brainstem
Cortical organization for movement -Frau Hitzig’s dressing table -the Jacksonian march of spasm
Apraxia Ideomotor apraxia – inability to carry out a simple motor activity in response to a verbal command Ideational apraxia – inability to carry out a sequence of actions that are components of a behavioural script -anatomy is very complex (most strokes cause some degree of apraxia -may involve disconnection of motor cortical areas from the rest of cortex
Basal ganglia and movement The basal ganglia are best thought of as a massive feedback loop -receive huge input from cortex, process this input and then send output to motor cortex -thought to control amplitude and direction of movments -especially important in producing remembered movements -most known because of involvement in Parkinson’s disease
Cerebellar contributions to movement • The cerebellum is a modular structure • One part of the cerebellum is involved in posture and balance (ataxia) • Another part of the cerebellum is involved in producing precise timing in neural “programs” for the control of skilled movement