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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 4 October 2001, pp. 1685-1699
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Istituto di Fisiologia Umana, I-43100 Parma, Italy
Gentilucci, Maurizio,
Francesca Benuzzi,
Massimo Gangitano, and
Silvia Grimaldi.
Grasp With Hand and Mouth: A Kinematic Study on Healthy
Subjects. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 1685-1699, 2001. Neurons involved in grasp preparation with hand and mouth were
previously recorded in the premotor cortex of monkey. The aim of the present kinematic study was to determine whether a unique planning underlies the act of grasping with hand and mouth in humans as
well. In a set of four experiments, healthy subjects reached and
grasped with the hand an object of different size while opening the
mouth (experiments 1 and 3), or extending the other forearm (experiment 4), or the fingers of the other
hand (experiment 5). In a subsequent set of three
experiments, subjects grasped an object of different size with the
mouth, while opening the fingers of the right hand (experiments
6-8). The initial kinematics of mouth and finger opening, but not
of forearm extension, was affected by the size of the grasped object
congruently with the size effect on initial grasp kinematics. This
effect was due neither to visual presentation of the object, without
the successive grasp motor act (experiment 2) nor to
synchronism between finger and mouth opening (experiments 3, 7, and 8). In experiment 9 subjects grasped
with the right hand an object of different size while pronouncing a
syllable printed on the target. Mouth opening and sound production were
affected by the grasped object size. The results of the present study
are discussed according to the notion that in an action each motor act
is prepared before the beginning of the motor sequence. Double grasp
preparation can be used for successive motor acts on the same object
as, for example, grasping food with the hand and ingesting it after
bringing it to the mouth. We speculate that the circuits involved in
double grasp preparation might have been the neural substrate where
hand motor patterns used as primitive communication signs were
transferred to mouth articulation system. This is in accordance with
the hypothesis that Broca's area derives phylogenetically from the
monkey premotor area where hand movements are controlled.
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