Shadmehr R and Krakauer JW (2008) A computational neuroanatomy
for motor control.
Experimental Brain
Research.
Abstract The study of patients to infer normal
brain function has a long tradition in neurology and psychology. More recently,
the motor system has been subject to quantitative and computational
characterization. The purpose of this review is to argue that the lesion
approach and theoretical motor control can mutually inform each other.
Specifically, one may identify distinct motor control processes from
computational models and map them onto specific deficits in patients. Here we review some of the impairments
in motor control, motor learning and higher-order motor control in patients
with lesions of the corticospinal tract, the cerebellum, parietal cortex, the
basal ganglia, and the medial temporal lobe. We attempt to explain some of
these impairments in terms of computational ideas such as state estimation,
optimization, prediction, cost, and reward. We suggest that a function of the
cerebellum is system identification: to built internal models that predict
sensory outcome of motor commands and correct motor commands through internal
feedback. A function of the
parietal cortex is state estimation: to integrate the predicted proprioceptive
and visual outcomes with sensory feedback to form a belief about how the
commands affected the states of the body and the environment. A function of
basal ganglia is related to optimal control: learning costs and rewards
associated with sensory states and estimating the “cost-to-go”
during execution of a motor task.
Finally, functions of the primary and the premotor cortices are related
to implementing the optimal control policy by transforming beliefs about
proprioceptive and visual states, respectively, into motor commands.
paper