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Movements and actions Chapter 11

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.).

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Movements and actions Chapter 11

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  1. Movements and actionsChapter 11

  2. 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.)

  3. 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’

  4. 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.

  5. Overview of neural control of movement

  6. Movements are constrained by the skeletal system

  7. Muscles control the actions of the skeletal system -antagonists -synergists

  8. The composition of muscles

  9. The neuromuscular junction

  10. 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)

  11. 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)

  12. Receptors for movement

  13. Muscle spindles signal muscle lengthGolgi tendon organs signal muscle tension

  14. 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

  15. 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

  16. 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

  17. Overview of neural control of movement

  18. Cortical organization for movement -Frau Hitzig’s dressing table -the Jacksonian march of spasm

  19. Orderly representation in motor cortex

  20. Outputs from cortex: The pyramidal system

  21. Beyond MI: Supplementary and premotor cortex

  22. 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

  23. 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

  24. 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

  25. Overview of neural control of movement

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