Sensory feedback to the cerebral cortex during voluntary movement in man
- 1 March 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Behavioral and Brain Sciences
- Vol. 1 (1), 129-147
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0140525x00060118
Abstract
This article describes a series of experiments directed toward the following questions: (1) Do signals from musculotendinous receptors reach consciousness? (2) Does feed-forward information of muscular force and expected extent of voluntary movement exist? To answer these questions data from voluntary compression of springs and strain-gauge have been analysed in healthy young subjects and in patients with unilateral focal lesions of the cerebral hemispheres.By successive elimination of information from other sources it was possible to verify that receptors in muscles and tendons do signal movement magnitude and muscular tension to the cerebral cortex, and that this information does indeed reach consciousness. There also exists a feed-forward mechanism signalling parameters of voluntary contraction. However, it is unclear whether peripheral, subcortical, or intracortical loops are directly involved. Perception of signals of muscular tension is abolished by lesions of the contralateral cortex near the central sulcus. It is possible that there exist separate cortical projection areas for kinaesthetic signals from muscles and from joints.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Estimation of weights and tensions and apparent involvement of a “sense of effort”Experimental Neurology, 1974
- THE CONTRIBUTION OF MUSCLE AFFERENTS TO KESLESTHESIA SHOWN BY VIBRATION INDUCED ILLUSIONSOF MOVEMENT AND BY THE EFFECTS OF PARALYSING JOINT AFFERENTSBrain, 1972
- Slowly Adapting Muscle Receptors in ManActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1970
- Muscle sense in manExperimental Neurology, 1967
- Static and Dynamic Properties of Golgi Tendon Organs in the Anterior Tibial and Soleus Muscles of the CatActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1967
- Spinal Cord and Brain Stem Pathways for Afferents from JointsPublished by Wiley ,1967
- Deafferentation in Monkeys: Effect on Conditioned Grasp ResponseScience, 1966
- Relations between the central Nervous System and the peripheral organsThe British Journal of Animal Behaviour, 1954
- Neural basis of the spontaneous optokinetic response produced by visual inversion.Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 1950
- Über die den Bewegungswahrnehmungen zugrunde liegenden Reize1Skandinavisches Archiv Für Physiologie, 1927