Primary motor cortex

From Psy3241

Revision as of 15:40, 24 April 2008 by BPEASE (Talk | contribs)


Picture of Primary Motor Cortex

Contents

Background

� Primary motor cortex is also called M1

� One of the principle areas involved in motor function

� Located in the frontal lobe of the brain along the precentral gyrus

� The role is to generate neural impulses that control the execution of movement

� Signals from M1 cross the body�s midline to activate skeletal muscles on the opposite side of the body

� The right hemisphere controls the left side of the body

� The left hemisphere controls the right side of the body

Somatotopic Representation

� Every part of the body is represented in the primary motor cortex

� Body part representations are arranged somatotopically

� The foot is next to the leg, next to the trunk, next to the arm, which is next to the hand

� The amount of brain matter devoted to a particular body part represents the amount of control that the primary motor cortex has over that body part

� A lot of cortical space is devoted to complex hand and finger movements; therefore, they have larger representations in M1

Corticospinal Tract

� Neurons in M1, supplementary motor area, and premotor cortex give rise to fibers of the corticospinal tract

� The corticospinal tract is the only direct pathway from the cortex to the spine

� This tract is composed of over a million fibers

� The fibers descend through the brainstem and cross to the opposite side of the body

� The fibers then continue to descend through the spine, terminating at the appropriate spinal levels

� This tract is the main pathway for control of voluntary movement in humans

Damage to Primary Motor Cortex

� Lesions in the primary motor cortex result in paralysis of the contralateral side of the body

Works Cited

The Anatomy of Movement

Personal tools