Velocity Signals Related to Hand Movements Recorded from Red Nucleus Neurons in Monkeys
- 27 August 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 217 (4562), 857-860
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.7100930
Abstract
Neural activity of the red nucleus was studied in monkeys trained to operate devices requiring shoulder, elbow, wrist, hand, or finger movements. Single cell activity was more closely related to movements of the hand and fingers than to movements of the other joints. Discharge consistently preceded movements by a constant time interval; duration of discharge was highly correlated with the duration of movement; and discharge rate was highly correlated with movement velocity. These data suggest a role for the rubrospinal pathway in the initiation and control of hand movements.This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Response of rubromotoneuronal cells identified by spike-triggered averaging of EMG activity in awake monkeysNeuroscience Letters, 1980
- Spinal projections from the midbrain in monkeyJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1978
- Coding of information about rapid eye movements in the pontine reticular formation of alert monkeysBrain Research, 1976
- Comparison between red nucleus and precentral neurons during learned movements in the monkeyBrain Research, 1976
- Input-output relations of the red nucleus in the catBrain Research, 1975
- Synaptic actions evoked from the red nucleus on the spinal alpha-motoneurons in the rhesus monkeyBrain Research, 1971
- THE FUNCTIONAL ORGANIZATION OF THE MOTOR SYSTEM IN THE MONKEYBrain, 1968
- Subcorticospinal projections in the Rhesus monkeyJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1962
- Responses of Retinal Ganglion Cells to Exponentially Increasing Light StimuliScience, 1961
- NOTE ON THE NUCLEUS RUBER MAGNOCELLULARIS AND ITS EFFERENT PATHWAY IN MANBrain, 1938