Context-Specific Grasp Movement Representation in Macaque Ventral Premotor Cortex

2010 | journal article

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​Context-Specific Grasp Movement Representation in Macaque Ventral Premotor Cortex​
Fluet, M.-C.; Baumann, M. A. & Scherberger, H. ​ (2010) 
The Journal of neuroscience30(45) pp. 15175​-15184​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.3343-10.2010 

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Authors
Fluet, M.-C.; Baumann, M. A.; Scherberger, Hansjörg 
Abstract
Hand grasping requires the transformation of sensory signals to hand movements. Neurons in area F5 (ventral premotor cortex) represent specific grasp movements (e.g., precision grip) as well as object features like orientation, and are involved in movement preparation and execution. Here, we examined how F5 neurons represent context-dependent grasping actions in macaques. We used a delayed grasping task in which animals grasped a handle either with a power or a precision grip depending on context information. Additionally, object orientation was varied to investigate how visual object features are integrated with context information. In 420 neurons from two animals, object orientation and grip type were equally encoded during the instruction epoch (27% and 26% of all cells, respectively). While orientation representation dropped during movement execution, grip type representation increased (20% vs 43%). According to tuning onset and offset, we classified neurons as sensory, sensorimotor, or motor. Grip type tuning was predominantly sensorimotor (28%) or motor (25%), whereas orientation-tuned cells were mainly sensory (11%) or sensorimotor (15%) and often also represented grip type (86%). Conversely, only 44% of grip-type tuned cells were also orientation-tuned. Furthermore, we found marked differences in the incidence of preferred conditions (power vs precision grips and middle vs extreme orientations) and in the anatomical distribution of the various cell classes. These results reveal important differences in how grip type and object orientation is processed in F5 and suggest that anatomically and functionally separable cell classes collaborate to generate hand grasping commands.
Issue Date
2010
Journal
The Journal of neuroscience 
ISSN
0270-6474
Language
English

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