Non-spatial, motor-specific activation in posterior parietal cortex
- PMID: 12021766
- DOI: 10.1038/nn0602-862
Non-spatial, motor-specific activation in posterior parietal cortex
Abstract
A localized cluster of neurons in macaque posterior parietal cortex, termed the parietal reach region (PRR), is activated when a reach is planned to a visible or remembered target. To explore the role of PRR in sensorimotor transformations, we tested whether cells would be activated when a reach is planned to an as-yet unspecified goal. Over one-third of PRR cells increased their firing after an instruction to prepare a reach, but not after an instruction to prepare a saccade, when the target of the movement remained unknown. A partially overlapping population (two-thirds of cells) was activated when the monkey was informed of the target location but not the type of movement to be made. Thus a subset of PRR neurons separately code spatial and effector-specific information, consistent with a role in specifying potential motor responses to particular targets.
Comment in
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Posterior parietal cortex: not just where, but how.Nat Neurosci. 2002 Jun;5(6):506-8. doi: 10.1038/nn0602-506. Nat Neurosci. 2002. PMID: 12037516 No abstract available.
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