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J Neurophysiol (September 27, 2006). doi:10.1152/jn.00411.2006
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Submitted on April 18, 2006
Accepted on September 18, 2006

Hemispheric Asymmetry in Memory-guided Pointing during Single-pulse Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation of Human Parietal Cortex

Michael Vesia1, Jachin A. Monteon2, Lauren E. Sergio3, and J. Douglas Crawford3*

1 Kinesiology and Health Science, York University, Toronto, Canada
2 Biology, York University, Toronto, Canada
3 Departments of Psychology, Biology, Kinesioly & Health Sciences, York University, Toronto, Canada

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jdc{at}yorku.ca.

Dorsal posterior parietal cortex (PPC) has been implicated through single-unit recordings, neuroimaging data, and studies of brain-damaged humans in the spatial guidance of reaching and pointing movements. The present study examines the causal effect of single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) over the left and right dorsal posterior parietal cortex during a memory-guided 'reach-to-touch' movement task in six human subjects. Stimulation of the left parietal hemisphere significantly increased endpoint variability, independent of visual field, with no horizontal bias. In contrast, right parietal stimulation did not increase variability, but instead produced a significantly systematic leftward directional shift in pointing (contralateral to stimulation site) in both visual fields. Furthermore, the same lateralized pattern persisted with left-hand movement, suggesting that these aspects of parietal control of pointing movements are spatially fixed. To test if the right parietal TMS shift occurs in visual or motor coordinates, we trained subjects to point correctly to optically reversed peripheral targets, viewed through a left-right Dove reversing prism. Following prism adaptation, the horizontal pointing direction for a given visual target reversed, but the direction of shift during right parietal TMS did not reverse. Taken together, these data suggest that induction of a focal current reveals a hemispheric asymmetry in the early stages of the putative spatial processing in PPC. These results also suggest that a brief TMS pulse modifies the output of the right PPC in motor coordinates downstream from the adapted visual-motor reversal, rather than modifying the upstream visual coordinates of the memory representation.




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