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J Neurophysiol (April 29, 2009). doi:10.1152/jn.00016.2009
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00016.2009v1
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Submitted on January 6, 2009
Revised on March 30, 2009
Accepted on April 22, 2009

Signaling of Grasp Dimension and Grasp Force in Dorsal Premotor Cortex and Primary Motor Cortex Neurons During Reach to Grasp in the Monkey

Claudia M Hendrix1, Carolyn R Mason2, and Timothy J. Ebner1*

1 University of Minnesota
2 Angelo State University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ebner001{at}umn.edu.

A fundamental question is how the central nervous system controls the hand with its many degrees of freedom. Several motor cortical areas, including the dorsal premotor cortex (PMd) and primary motor cortex (M1), are involved in reach to grasp. Although neurons in PMd are known to modulate in relation to the type of grasp and neurons in M1 in relation to grasp force and finger movements, whether specific parameters of whole hand-shaping are encoded in the discharge of these cells has not been investigated. In this study, two monkeys were trained to reach and grasp 16 objects varying in shape, size and orientation. Grasp force was explicitly controlled, requiring the monkeys to exert either three or five levels of grasp force on each object. The animals were unable to see the objects or their hands. Single PMd and M1 neurons were recorded during the task and cell firing was examined for modulation with object properties and grasp force. The firing of the vast majority of PMd and M1 neurons varied significantly as a function of the object presented as well as the object grasp dimension. Grasp dimension of the object was an important determinant of the firing of cells in both PMd and M1. A smaller percentage of PMd and M1 neurons were modulated by grasp force. Linear encoding was prominent with grasp force but less so with grasp dimension. The correlations with grasp dimension and grasp force were stronger in the firing of M1 than PMd neurons and across both regions the modulation with these parameters increased as reach to grasp proceeded. All PMd and M1 neurons that signaled grasp force also signaled grasp dimension; yet the two signals showed limited interactions, providing a neural substrate for the independent control of these two parameters at the behavioral level.







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