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Functional somatotopy of finger representations in human primary motor cortex

โœ Scribed by Peter Dechent; Jens Frahm


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
1022 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
1065-9471

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

To assess the degree of fineโ€scale somatotopy within the hand area of the human primary motor cortex (M1), functional mapping of individual movements of all fingers was performed in healthy young subjects (n = 7) using MRI at 0.8 ร— 0.8 mm^2^ resolution and 4 mm section thickness. The experimental design comprised both a direct paradigm contrasting single digit movements vs. motor rest and multiple differential paradigms contrasting single digit movements vs. the movement of another digit. Direct mapping resulted in largely overlapping activations. A somatotopic arrangement was only recognizable when considering the mean centerโ€ofโ€mass coordinates of individual digit representations averaged across subjects. In contrast, differential paradigms revealed more segregated and somatotopically ordered activations in single subjects. The use of centerโ€ofโ€mass coordinates yielded interโ€digit distances ranging from 2.0 to 16.8 mm, which reached statistical significance for pairs of more distant digits. For the middle fingers, the functional somatotopy obtained by differential mapping was dependent on the choice of the digit used for control. These results confirm previous concepts that finger somatotopy in the human M1 hand area emerges as a functional predominance of individual digit representations sharing common areas in a distributed though ordered network. Hum. Brain Mapping 18:272โ€“283, 2003. ยฉ 2003 Wileyโ€Liss, Inc.


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