Joern Diedrichsen, Sarah E. Criscimagna-Hemminger,
and Reza Shadmehr (2007) Dissociating timing and coordination as functions of
the cerebellum. Journal of Neuroscience 27:6291-6301.
Abstract The function of the cerebellum in motor control is a
long-standing puzzle because cerebellar damage is associated with both timing
and coordination deficits. Timing
is the ability to produce consistent intervals between movements based on an
internal representation of time. Coordination, in contrast, is a
state-dependent control process where motor commands to one effector depend on
the predicted state of another effector. Here we considered a task consisting
of two components, an arm movement and an isometric press with the thumb. We
found that when the two components temporally overlapped, the brain controlled
the thumb using an estimate of the state of the arm. In contrast, when the
components did not temporally overlap, the brain controlled the thumb solely
based on an internal estimate of time.
Using fMRI, we contrasted these two conditions and found that lobule V
of the cerebellum ipsilateral to the arm movement was consistently more
activated during state-dependent control. When the brain learned time-dependent
control, no region of the cerebellum showed consistently increased activity
compared to state-dependent control.
Rather, the consistent activity associated with time-dependent control
was found in language areas of the left cerebral hemisphere along the Sylvian fissure.
We suggest that timing and coordination are behaviorally distinct modes
of motor control, and that the anterior cerebellum is a crucial node in
state-dependent motor control, computing a predictive state estimate of one
effector (e.g. the arm) in order to coordinate actions of another effector (the
thumb).
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