What has your doctor have you doing to recover those three grasping areas?
http://www.alphagalileo.org/ViewItem.aspx?ItemId=166424&CultureCode=en
Our hands are highly
developed grasping organs that are in continuous use. Long before we
stir our first cup of coffee in the morning, our hands have executed a
multitude of grasps. Directing a pen between our thumb and index finger
over a piece of paper with absolute precision appears as easy as
catching a ball or operating a doorknob. The neuroscientists Stefan
Schaffelhofer and Hansjörg Scherberger of the German Primate Center
(DPZ) have studied how the brain controls the different grasping
movements. In their research with rhesus macaques, it was found that the
three brain areas AIP, F5 and M1 that are responsible for planning and
executing hand movements, perform different tasks within their neural
network. The AIP area is mainly responsible for processing visual
features of objects, such as their size and shape. This optical
information is translated into motor commands in the F5 area. The M1
area is ultimately responsible for turning this motor commands into
actions. The results of the study contribute to the development of
neuroprosthetics that should help paralyzed patients to regain their
hand functions (eLife, 2016).
The three brain areas AIP, F5 and M1 lay in the cerebral cortex and
form a neural network responsible for translating visual properties of
an object into a corresponding hand movement. Until now, the details of
how this “visuomotor transformation” are performed have been unclear.
During the course of his PhD thesis at the German Primate Center,
neuroscientist Stefan Schaffelhofer intensively studied the neural
mechanisms that control grasping movements. "We wanted to find out how
and where visual information about grasped objects, for example their
shape or size, and motor characteristics of the hand, like the strength
and type of a grip, are processed in the different grasp-related areas
of the brain", says Schaffelhofer.
For this, two rhesus macaques were trained to repeatedly grasp 50
different objects. At the same time, the activity of hundreds of nerve
cells was measured with so-called microelectrode arrays. In order to
compare the applied grip types with the neural signals, the monkeys wore
an electromagnetic data glove that recorded all the finger and hand
movements. The experimental setup was designed to individually observe
the phases of the visuomotor transformation in the brain, namely the
processing of visual object properties, the motion planning and
execution. For this, the scientists developed a delayed grasping task.
In order for the monkey to see the object, it was briefly lit before the
start of the grasping movement. The subsequent movement took place in
the dark with a short delay. In this way, visual and motor signals of
neurons could be examined separately.
The results show that the AIP area is primarily responsible for the
processing of visual object features. “The neurons mainly respond to the
three-dimensional shape of different objects”, says Stefan
Schaffelhofer. “Due to the different activity of the neurons, we could
precisely distinguish as to whether the monkeys had seen a sphere, cube
or cylinder. Even abstract object shapes could be differentiated based
on the observed cell activity.”
In contrast to AIP, area F5 and M1 did not represent object
geometries, but the corresponding hand configurations used to grasp the
objects. The information of F5 and M1 neurons indicated a strong
resemblance to the hand movements recorded with the data glove. “In our
study we were able to show where and how visual properties of objects
are converted into corresponding movement commands”, says Stefan
Schaffelhofer. “In this process, the F5 area plays a central role in
visuomotor transformation. Its neurons receive direct visual object
information from AIP and can translate the signals into motor plans that
are then executed in M1. Thus, area F5 has contact to both, the visual
and motor part of the brain.”
Knowledge of how to control grasp movements is essential for the
development of neuronal hand prosthetics. “In paraplegic patients, the
connection between the brain and limbs is no longer functional. Neural
interfaces can replace this functionality”, says Hansjörg Scherberger,
head of the Neurobiology Laboratory at the DPZ. “They can read the motor
signals in the brain and use them for prosthetic control. In order to
program these interfaces properly, it is crucial to know how and where
our brain controls the grasping movements”. The findings of this study
will facilitate to new neuroprosthetic applications that can selectively
process the areas’ individual information in order to improve their
usability and accuracy.
http://www.dpz.eu
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